I H Luis Jacome
International Monetary Fund
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Publication
Featured researches published by I H Luis Jacome.
LTV and DTI Limits-Going Granular | 2015
I H Luis Jacome; Srobona Mitra
There is increasing interest in loan-to-value (LTV) and debt-service-to-income (DTI) limits as many countries face a new round of rising house prices. Yet, very little is known on how these regulatory instruments work in practice. This paper contributes to fill this gap by looking closely at their use and effectiveness in six economies—Brazil, Hong Kong SAR, Korea, Malaysia, Poland, and Romania. Insights include: rapid growth in high-LTV loans with long maturities or in the number of borrowers with multiple mortgages can be signs of build up in systemic risk; monitoring nonperforming loans by loan characteristics can help in calibrating changes in the LTV and DTI limits; as leakages are almost inevitable, countries strive to address them at an early stage; and, in most cases, LTVs and DTIs were effective in reducing loan-growth and improving debt-servicing performances of borrowers, but not always in curbing house price growth.
Archive | 2016
Yan Carriere-Swallow; I H Luis Jacome; Nicolás E. Magud; Alejandro M. Werner
Latin America’s central banks have made substantial progress towards delivering an environment of price stability that is supportive of sustainable economic growth. We review these achievements, and discuss remaining challenges facing central banking in the region. Where inflation remains high and volatile, achieving durable price stability will require making central banks more independent. Where inflation targeting regimes are well-established, remaining challenges surround assessments of economic slack, the communication of monetary policy, and clarifying the role of the exchange rate. Finally, macroprudential policies must be coordinated with existing objectives, and care taken to preserve the primacy of price stability.
Is Credit Easing Viable in Emerging and Developing Economies? An Empirical Approach | 2018
I H Luis Jacome; Tahsin Saadi Sedik; Alexander Ziegenbein
During the global financial crisis, many central banks in advanced economies engaged in credit easing. These policies have been perceived as largely successful in reducing stress in financial markets, thus avoiding larger output losses. In this paper, we study empirically whether credit easing is also a viable policy tool to cope with banking crises in emerging and developing economies. We find that credit easing leads to a sharp increase in domestic currency depreciation, high inflation, and a substantial reduction in economic growth in a large panel of emerging and developing economies. For advanced economies, we find the effects to be benign. Our results suggest that emerging and developing economies should be cautious when using credit easing as it may fuel adverse macroeconomic repercussions.
Social Science Research Network | 2005
Agustín Carstens; I H Luis Jacome
Emerging Markets Review | 2012
I H Luis Jacome; Tahsin Saadi Sedik; Simon Townsend
El Trimestre Económico | 2013
I H Luis Jacome
Archive | 2016
Yan Carriere-Swallow; Hamid Faruqee; I H Luis Jacome; Krishna Srinivasan
Archive | 2016
I H Luis Jacome; Yan Carriere-Swallow; Hamid Faruqee; Krishna Srinivasan
Central Banking in Latin America : The Way Forward | 2016
Yan Carriere-Swallow; I H Luis Jacome; Nicolás E. Magud; Alejandro M. Werner
El Trimestre Económico | 2013
I H Luis Jacome