Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy

This paper discusses the design of monetary policy in a New Keynesian small open economy framework by introducing nominal wage rigidities and incomplete exchange rate pass-through on import prices. Three main findings are summarized. First, with the existence of an incomplete exchange rate pass-thro...

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Main Authors: Hyuk-Jae Rhee, Jeongseok Song
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Institute for International Economic Policy 2018-09-01
Series:East Asian Economic Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.EAER.2018.22.3.347
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spelling doaj-f9dd817292fe4466bc080cceebe5ecce2020-11-24T20:43:39ZengKorea Institute for International Economic PolicyEast Asian Economic Review2508-16402508-16672018-09-01223337370doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.EAER.2018.22.3.347Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open EconomyHyuk-Jae Rhee0Jeongseok Song1University of WindsorChung-Ang UniversityThis paper discusses the design of monetary policy in a New Keynesian small open economy framework by introducing nominal wage rigidities and incomplete exchange rate pass-through on import prices. Three main findings are summarized. First, with the existence of an incomplete exchange rate pass-through and nominal wage rigidities, the optimal policy is to seek to minimize the output gap, the variance of domestic price and wage inflation, as well as deviations from the law of one price. Second, the CPI inflation targeting Taylor rule is welfare enhancing when there is a technological shock to the economy. The exception occurs when there is a foreign income shock, which minimizes welfare losses under the domestic inflation targeting Taylor rule. Last, two stylized Taylor rules turn out to be a bad approximation, but the modified Taylor rules that respond to the unemployment gap rather than the output gap are a closer approximation to the optimal policy.http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.EAER.2018.22.3.347Incomplete Pass-throughNominal Wage RigiditiesModified Taylor RuleMonetary PolicySmall Open Economy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hyuk-Jae Rhee
Jeongseok Song
spellingShingle Hyuk-Jae Rhee
Jeongseok Song
Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy
East Asian Economic Review
Incomplete Pass-through
Nominal Wage Rigidities
Modified Taylor Rule
Monetary Policy
Small Open Economy
author_facet Hyuk-Jae Rhee
Jeongseok Song
author_sort Hyuk-Jae Rhee
title Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy
title_short Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy
title_full Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy
title_fullStr Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy
title_full_unstemmed Exchange Rate Pass-through, Nominal Wage Rigidities, and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy
title_sort exchange rate pass-through, nominal wage rigidities, and monetary policy in a small open economy
publisher Korea Institute for International Economic Policy
series East Asian Economic Review
issn 2508-1640
2508-1667
publishDate 2018-09-01
description This paper discusses the design of monetary policy in a New Keynesian small open economy framework by introducing nominal wage rigidities and incomplete exchange rate pass-through on import prices. Three main findings are summarized. First, with the existence of an incomplete exchange rate pass-through and nominal wage rigidities, the optimal policy is to seek to minimize the output gap, the variance of domestic price and wage inflation, as well as deviations from the law of one price. Second, the CPI inflation targeting Taylor rule is welfare enhancing when there is a technological shock to the economy. The exception occurs when there is a foreign income shock, which minimizes welfare losses under the domestic inflation targeting Taylor rule. Last, two stylized Taylor rules turn out to be a bad approximation, but the modified Taylor rules that respond to the unemployment gap rather than the output gap are a closer approximation to the optimal policy.
topic Incomplete Pass-through
Nominal Wage Rigidities
Modified Taylor Rule
Monetary Policy
Small Open Economy
url http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.EAER.2018.22.3.347
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