Monetary Policy Transmission in the Euro Area: What Do Aggregate and National Structural Models Tell Us?

76 Pages Posted: 7 Feb 2003

See all articles by Peter van Els

Peter van Els

De Nederlandsche Bank

Alberto Locarno

Bank of Italy

Julian Benedict Morgan

European Central Bank (ECB)

Jean-Pierre Villetelle

Banque de France

Date Written: December 2001

Abstract

This paper analyses the monetary transmission mechanism in the euro area through the use of large scale macroeconomic models at the disposal of the European Central Bank and the National Central Banks of the Eurosystem. The results reported are based on a carefully designed common simulation experiment involving a 100 basis point rise in the policy interest rate for two years accompanied by common assumptions regarding the path of long-term interest rates and the exchange rate. Aggregating the country level results, the fall in output is found to reach a maximum of 0.4% after 2 years. The maximum aggregate fall in prices is also 0.4%, but it occurs 2 years later. The dominant channel of transmission in the first two years is the exchange rate channel, but in terms of the impact on output, the user cost of capital channel becomes dominant from the third year of the simulation onwards.

Keywords: Monetary policy transmission mechanism, macroeconomic models

JEL Classification: C50, E17, E5

Suggested Citation

van Els, Peter and Locarno, Alberto and Morgan, Julian Benedict and Villetelle, Jean-Pierre, Monetary Policy Transmission in the Euro Area: What Do Aggregate and National Structural Models Tell Us? (December 2001). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=356300 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.356300

Peter van Els

De Nederlandsche Bank ( email )

PO Box 98
1000 AB Amsterdam
Amsterdam, 1000 AB
Netherlands

Alberto Locarno

Bank of Italy ( email )

Via Nazionale 91
Rome, 00184
Italy

Julian Benedict Morgan (Contact Author)

European Central Bank (ECB) ( email )

Sonnemannstrasse 22
Frankfurt am Main, 60314
Germany
0049 69 13440 (Phone)
0049 69 1344 6000 (Fax)

Jean-Pierre Villetelle

Banque de France ( email )

Paris
France

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
276
Abstract Views
2,084
Rank
203,304
PlumX Metrics