Working Papers

Financial Stability and Monetary Policy Reaction: Evidence from the GCC Countries

No.

1474

Publisher

ERF

Date

August, 2021

Topic

E4. Money and Interest Rates

E5. Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit

C3. Multiple or Simultaneous Equation Models

This paper investigates the interaction between monetary policy and financial stability in the Gulf Cooperation Council (hereafter GCC) countries by introducing a new composite financial stability index to monitor the financial vulnerabilities and crisis periods. To this end, the study estimated monetary policy reaction functions for each of the GCC countries (namely, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates) using the Nonlinear Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model (NARDL) over the period from 2006-Q4 to 2020-Q2. Empirical findings indicate that monetary authorities' response to the deviation of inflation from their target level, output gap, or exchange rate movement differ in terms of magnitude, sign, and significance across the GCC countries. The results further explain that monetary authorities react significantly to negative or positive shocks in financial stability, but their reaction is different in the short-run or long run. Overall, an augmented Taylor rule including financial stability as an additional monetary policy objective is more appropriate for the GCC countries.
Financial Stability and Monetary Policy Reaction: Evidence from the GCC Countries

Research Fellows

Ahmed Elsayed

Associate Professor of Financial Economics, United Arab...

Financial Stability and Monetary Policy Reaction: Evidence from the GCC Countries

Authors

Nader Naifar

Professor of Finance College of Economics and...

Financial Stability and Monetary Policy Reaction: Evidence from the GCC Countries

Authors

Samia Nasreen

Associate Professor, Department of Economics Lahore College...