Consider a small open economy producing a good which is an imperfect substitute for a foreign good. There are five categories of agents: firms, households, commercial banks, the central bank, and the government. The world price of the foreign good is taken as exogenous and normalized to unity. The nominal exchange rate, E, is flexible. The supply of the domestic good is given by YS * =YS * (PD) * Where PD is the price of the domestic good and YS = d YS’ /d PD > 0 Investment, I, is financed by bank loans and is defined as 1 = I(iL) Where iL is the loan rate and I’ < 0 Households hold three categories of assets: cash (which bears no interest), deposits with domestic banks, and foreign-currency deposits abroad. Assets are imperfect substitutes. Household financial wealth, F ^ H is defined as: FH = M+D+E.D* Where M is cash holdings, and D (respectively, D*) domestic (respectively, foreign) deposits. The demand for deposits is M / D = m, Where ID is the interest rate on domestic deposits, and m > 0 is a constant coefficient. The demand for foreign deposits depends on the domestic and foreign interest rates: E0D* /F0H =h ( ID ,i* ), Where F0H is the predetermined component of household financial wealth, E0 ISthe nominal exchange rate at the beginning of the period, iD the interest rate on domestic deposits, i* the interest rate on foreign deposits, and h0 is a share function with partial derivatives ∂h/∂iD0. Household consumption spending, C, depends on factor income, interest rates, and wealth: C = c1 YS -c2 (iD +i^*) + c3(F0H / PD) where 0< c1< 1, c2, c3 >0. The balance sheet of commercial banks is L = D + LB Where L = PDI denotes loans to firms, and LB borrowing from the central bank The interest rate on domestic deposits is ID = IR Where IR is the cost of borrowing from the central bank, or the refinance rate. The interest rate on loans is IL = IR + Ꝋ Where Ꝋ is a premium, defined as Ꝋ = Ꝋ (PD * K0 – L0) Where L0 is beginning-of-period loans and Ꝋ ≤ 0 The equilibrium condition of the market for domestic goods is YS – X(z) = (1 – delta)C + 1 + G, Where G is government spending, X exports, z = E / (PD) the real exchange rate (defined such that an increase is a depreciation), X’ = dX/dz > 0 and 0 < delta < 1 is the fixed fraction of total household expenditure spent on imported goods The equilibrium condition of the market for foreign exchange is given by Z-1 * [X(z) – delta*C] +(1+i*) D0* -(D* -D0* ) = 0. Suppose that the foreign interest rate, i*, rises. Let E1 denote the new equilibrium point, corresponding to the intersection of the new curves F1G1 and X1X1, characterized by higher domestic prices. The government would like to bring the economy back to its initial equilibrium position, point E0, corresponding to the intersection of the initial curves F0G0 and X0X0. What is the key reason why monetary policy by itself, or fiscal policy by itself, may or may not be able to bring the economy from E1 back to E0?

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Consider a small open economy producing a good which is an imperfect substitute for a foreign good. There are five categories of agents: firms, households, commercial banks, the central bank, and the government. The world price of the foreign good is taken as exogenous and normalized to unity. The nominal exchange rate, E, is flexible.

The supply of the domestic good is given by

  • YS * =YS * (PD) *

Where PD is the price of the domestic good and YS = d YS’ /d PD > 0

 

Investment, I, is financed by bank loans and is defined as

  • 1 = I(iL)

Where iL is the loan rate and I’ < 0

 

Households hold three categories of assets: cash (which bears no interest), deposits with domestic banks, and foreign-currency deposits abroad. Assets are imperfect substitutes. Household financial wealth, F ^ H is defined as:

  • FH = M+D+E.D*

Where M is cash holdings, and D (respectively, D*) domestic (respectively, foreign) deposits.

 

The demand for deposits is

  • M / D = m,

Where ID is the interest rate on domestic deposits, and m > 0 is a constant coefficient.

 

The demand for foreign deposits depends on the domestic and foreign interest rates:

  • E0D* /F0H =h ( ID ,i* ),

 

Where F0H is the predetermined component of household financial wealth, E0 ISthe nominal exchange rate at the beginning of the period, iD the interest rate on domestic deposits, i* the interest rate on foreign deposits, and h0 is a share function with partial derivatives

∂h/∂iD<hiD <0, ∂h/∂i* = hi*>0.

Household consumption spending, C, depends on factor income, interest rates, and wealth:

 

  • C = c1 YS -c2 (iD +i^*) + c3(F0H / PD)

where 0< c1< 1, c2, c3 >0.

 

The balance sheet of commercial banks is

  • L = D + LB

Where L = PDI denotes loans to firms, and LB borrowing from the central bank

 

The interest rate on domestic deposits is

  • ID = IR

 

Where IR is the cost of borrowing from the central bank, or the refinance rate.

 

The interest rate on loans is

  • IL = IR + Ꝋ

Where Ꝋ is a premium, defined as

 

  • Ꝋ = Ꝋ (PD * K0 – L0)

Where L0 is beginning-of-period loans and Ꝋ ≤ 0

 

The equilibrium condition of the market for domestic goods is

  • YS – X(z) = (1 – delta)C + 1 + G,

Where G is government spending, X exports, z = E / (PD) the real exchange rate (defined such that an increase is a depreciation), X’ = dX/dz > 0 and 0 < delta < 1 is the fixed fraction of total household expenditure spent on imported goods

The equilibrium condition of the market for foreign exchange is given by

Z-1 * [X(z) – delta*C] +(1+i*) D0* -(D* -D0* ) = 0.

Suppose that the foreign interest rate, i*, rises.

Let E1 denote the new equilibrium point, corresponding to the intersection of the new curves F1G1 and X1X1, characterized by higher domestic prices. The government would like to bring the economy back to its initial equilibrium position, point E0, corresponding to the intersection of the initial curves F0G0 and X0X0.

What is the key reason why monetary policy by itself, or fiscal policy by itself, may or may not be able to bring the economy from E1 back to E0?

 

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