The effectiveness of traditional instruments of monetary policy during the foreign exchange auction system in Zambia

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Date
2011-04-25
Authors
Mutale, Francis Brown Chafwa
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Abstract
In a liberalised economy the monetary authority traditionally relies on four instruments with which to control money supply, namely, open market operations, legal minimum reserve requirement changes, discount rat© policy and moral suasion. In this study the effectiveness of traditional instruments of monetary policy during the foreign exchange auction system in Zambia was examined. The policy instruments were each in turn scrutinized under the following headings = (a) theoretical underpinnings;(b) limitations and;(c) performance during the auction period from which policy directions and conclusions were drawn. Open market operations" effectiveness to restrain money supply was severely compromised largely due to government's desire to maintain the huge budget deficit in real terms in the face of the fast depreciating local currency on the weekly auction. The variable minimum reserve requirements was drastically effective and efficient in its own right, but its impact was small due to the piecemeal nature of reserve ratio adjustments. The discount rate policy proved illusive as the economy displayed a semblance of the Gibson's Paradox - the parallel movement of the price level with interest rates. Finally, the potency of moral suasion was greatly curtailed by incongruous intra-national and international politics of the day coupled with the lackadaisical attitude of the monetary authority
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: Economics -- Study and teaching--Africa
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