sg logo
mas logo
  Contact Info | Feedback | Sitemap
Search
Advanced Search
left sky
mas building
For Financial Institutions
For Researchers/Analysts
For Students
For Journalists
For Consumers
blank
arrow MONEYSENSE
arrow MASNET
arrow OPERA
arrow SGS
arrow SIC
print

MAS Staff Paper No. 31, Jun 2004

Singapore's Unique Monetary Policy: How Does It Work?

By Eric Parrado, Economist, International Monetary Fund


Abstract

The Monetary Authority of Singapore, instead of relying on short-term interest rates or monetary aggregates as its monetary policy instrument, conducts policy by managing the trade-weighted exchange rate index (TWI). This paper investigates how this operating procedure actually works. For empirical purposes, it assumes the authorities follow a reaction function that aims the TWI at stabilizing expected inflation and maintaining output at potential. A partial adjustment mechanism is included to dampen the actual changes in the exchange rate. The estimates confirm that the major focus of monetary policy in Singapore is controlling inflation. The estimated changes in the TWI track the actual change relatively well, and the estimated parameters are as expected. Accordingly, they support the hypothesis that monetary policy in Singapore can be described by a forward-looking policy rule that reacts to both inflation and output volatility. The results suggest that Singapore's monetary policy has mainly reacted to large deviations in the target variables, which is consistent with monetary policy's medium-term orientation.

This paper can be downloaded in PDF format To Download Pdf File Click Here(PDF, 184KB)

and can be viewed and printed with Adobe's Acrobat(TM) Reader To get Acorbat Reader

chart pic
Last modified on 29/3/2007