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Deconstructing credibility: The breaking of monetary policy rules in Brazil
Affiliation:1. Department of Economics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2H4, Canada;2. Centre d''économie de l''Université Paris Nord, Université Paris XIII, France;3. LEO, Université d''Orléans, 6 Avenue du Parc Floral, 45100 Orléans, France;4. ESC Rennes School of Business, 2 rue Robert d''Arbrissel, 35065 Rennes Cedex, France;1. Australian National University and Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis, Australia;2. University of Technology, Sydney and Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis, Australia;3. University of East Anglia, United Kingdom;4. University of Queensland and Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis, Australia
Abstract:Can political interference deconstruct credibility that was hardly-earned through successful stabilization policy? We analyze the recent switch in the conduct of monetary policy by the Central Bank of Brazil (BCB). Brazil is the largest Emerging Market Economy to formally target inflation, having adopted the Inflation Targeting (IT) regime in 1999. In the early years of IT, the BCB engaged in constructing credibility with price setting agents and succeeded to anchor inflation expectations to its target even under adverse conditions such as exchange rate crises. We argue that this effort to maintain IT rules-based policy ended in 2011, as a new country president and BCB board came to power. We then discuss the consequences of this credibility loss. Our main results can be summarized as follows: (i) we provide strong empirical evidence of the BCB’s shift toward looser, discretionary policy after 2011; (ii) preliminary evidence suggests that this shift has affected agents’ inflation expectations generating social and economic costs.
Keywords:Monetary policy  Inflation targeting  Credibility  Emerging market economies  Brazil  E50  E52  E58
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