6 research outputs found
A method for indicating economic transition with an application to Albania
We offer a method for assessing the progress of transition economies towards becoming market economies. A simple macroeconomic model is used which incorporates certain microeconomic features relevant to a transition economy that is introducing market-driven resource allocation. According to our model, mean reversion in the real exchange rate suggests that early economic reforms from 1992 to 1996 in Albania were promoting economic transition. Our findings for this period are supportive of the analysis of others including the IMF
Credibility and fundamentals Were the classical and interwar gold standards well-behaved target zones?
Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.36425(no 33) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
Capital flows in a transitional economy and the sterilization dilemma: The hungarian experience, 1992-97
This paper evaluates Hungary's dilemma with sterilization in the context of the record of countries elsewhere that have experienced similar capital inflow episodes, e.g., Latin America and Asia. The study focuses on the short-run impact of sterilization on monetary policy. The empirical results indicate that sterilized interventions by the National Bank of Hungary (NBH) did not neutralize capital inflows until possibly the middle of 1995, following a change in government and, more significantly, a change in exchange rate regimes. Indeed, it appears that monetary policy was overly restrictive and that, for a time, the NBH overcompensated for the inflows of capital.