In this study, we examined the role of monetary and fiscal policies in the diversification of oil-dependent economies. Indeed, the change in external condition due to recent pandemic event and international political frictions have profoundly impacted oil-exporting countries. On the demand side, they have endured an abrupt fall in world oil consumption due to lockdowns during pandemic crisis and are facing a potential
decline of world oil demand as a result of a shift toward green production to reduce pollution to the planet. On the supply side, they are facing negative supply shocks on imported goods due to the disruption of the global value chain and the resulting stagnation of global supply chain. To provide some policy responses to the need for diversification of oil-exporting economies, we built a DSGE model including two production
sectors and a banking system. We simulated different scenarios aiming at orienting monetary and fiscal policies towards supporting production in the non-oil sector. Our main results show that monetary policy loses its efficiency facing negative oil price shocks. The effects of oil exports on bank’s liquidity and credit in the market are much greater than Central Bank’s adjustment on the standard interest rate. However, by supporting the non-oil sector, fiscal policy is efficient to reduce the contraction risk for oil-exporting economies.
Authors
Mohamed Tahar Benkhodja
Assistant Professor of Economics, ESSCA School of...
Authors
Tovonony Razafindrabe
CREM, Université Rennes