bibtype V - Research Report
ARLID 0531087
utime 20240111141039.4
mtime 20200722235959.9
title (primary) (eng) ECB monetary policy and commodity prices
publisher
place Praha
name Institute of Economic Studies, Faculty of Social Science, Charles University
pub_time 2020
specification
page_count 35 s.
media_type E
edition
name IES Working Papers
keyword European Central Bank
keyword commodity prices
keyword monetary policy
author (primary)
ARLID cav_un_auth*0394006
share 50
name1 Aliyev
name2 S.
country AZ
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0312139
share 50
name1 Kočenda
name2 Evžen
institution UTIA-B
full_dept (cz) Ekonometrie
full_dept Department of Econometrics
department (cz) E
department E
full_dept Department of Econometrics
country CZ
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
source
source_type working paper
url http://library.utia.cas.cz/separaty/2020/E/kocenda-0531087.pdf
cas_special
abstract (eng) We analyze the impact of the ECB monetary policies on global aggregate and sectoral commodity prices using monthly data from January 2001 till August 2019. We employ a SVAR model and assess separately period of conventional monetary policy before global financial crisis (GFC) and unconventional monetary policy during post-crisis period. Our key results indicate that contractionary monetary policy shocks have positive effects on the aggregate and sectoral commodity prices during both conventional and unconvetional monetary policy periods. The effect is statistically significant for aggregate commodity prices during post-crisis period. In terms of sectoral impact, the effect is statistically significant for food prices in both periods and for fuel prices during post-crisis period; other commodities display positive but statistically insignificant responses. Further, we demonstrate that the impact of the ECB monetary policy on commodity prices increased remarkably after the GFC. Our results also suggest that the effect of the ECB monetary policy on commodity prices does not transmit directly through market demand and supply expectations channel, but rather through the exchange rate channel that influences the European market demand directly.
RIV AH
FORD0 50000
FORD1 50200
FORD2 50202
reportyear 2021
num_of_auth 2
inst_support RVO:67985556
permalink http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0310091
confidential S
arlyear 2020
mrcbU10 2020
mrcbU10 Praha Institute of Economic Studies, Faculty of Social Science, Charles University
mrcbU56 working paper