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Featured researches published by Jan Vlcek.


The Manchester School | 2015

Basel III: Long-Term Impact on Economic Performance and Fluctuations

Paolo Angelini; Laurent Clerc; Vasco Cúrdia; Leonardo Gambacorta; Andrea Gerali; Alberto Locarno; Roberto Motto; Werner Roeger; Skander Van den Heuvel; Jan Vlcek

We assess the long-term economic impact of the new regulatory standards (the Basel III reform), answering the following questions: 1) What is the impact of the reform on long-term economic performance? 2) What is the impact of the reform on economic fluctuations? 3) What is the impact of the adoption of countercyclical capital buffers on economic fluctuations? The main results are the following: 1) Each percentage point increase in the capital ratio causes a median 0.09 percent decline in the level of steady-state output, relative to the baseline. The impact of the new liquidity regulation is of a similar order of magnitude, at 0.08 percent. This paper does not estimate the benefits of the new regulation in terms of reduced frequency and severity of financial crisis, analyzed in Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (2010b). 2) The reform should dampen output volatility; the magnitude of the effect is heterogeneous across models; the median effect is modest. 3) The adoption of countercyclical capital buffers could have a more sizable dampening effect on output volatility.


Macroeconomic Costs of Higher Bank Capital and Liquidity Requirements | 2011

Macroeconomic Costs of Higher Bank Capital and Liquidity Requirements

Scott Roger; Jan Vlcek

This paper uses a DSGE model with banks and financial frictions in credit markets to assess the medium-term macroeconomic costs of increasing capital and liquidity requirements. The analysis indicates that the macroeconomic costs of such measures are sensitive to the length of the implementation period as well as to the adjustment strategy used by banks, and the scope for monetary policy to respond to the regulatory changes.


Archive | 2013

Forecasting and Monetary Policy Analysis in Low-Income Countries: Food and Non-Food Inflation in Kenya

Michal Andrle; Andrew Berg; R. Armando Morales; Rafael Portillo; Jan Vlcek

We develop a semi-structural new-Keynesian open-economy model, with separate food and non-food inflation dynamics, for forecasting and monetary policy analysis in low-income countries and apply it to Kenya. We use the model to run several policy-relevant exercises. First, we filter international and Kenyan data (on output, inflation and its components, exchange rates and interest rates) to recover a model-based decomposition of most variables into trends (or potential values) and temporary movements (or gaps) — including for the international and domestic relative price of food. Second, we use the filtration exercise to recover the sequence of domestic and foreign macroeconomic shocks that account for business cycle dynamics in Kenya over the last few years, with a special emphasis on the various factors (international food prices, monetary policy) driving inflation. Third, we perform an out-of-sample forecast to identify where the economy — and therefore policy — was likely headed given the inflationary pressures at the end of our sample (2011Q2). We find that while imported food price shocks have been an important source of inflation, both in 2008 and more recently, accommodating monetary policy has also played a role, most notably through its effect on the nominal exchange rate. The model correctly predicted that a policy tightening was required, although the actual interest rate increase was larger. We discuss implications for the use of model-based policy analysis in low income countries.


Archive | 2013

The Monetary Transmission Mechanism in the Tropics: A Narrative Approach

Andrew Berg; Luisa Charry; Rafael Portillo; Jan Vlcek

Many central banks in low-income countries in Sub-Saharan Africa are modernising their monetary policy frameworks. Standard statistical procedures have had limited success in identifying the channels of monetary transmission in such countries. Here we take a narrative approach, following Romer and Romer (1989), and center on a significant tightening of monetary policy that took place in 2011 in four members of the East African Community: Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda. We find clear evidence of the transmission mechanism in most of the countries, and argue that deviations can be explained by differences in the policy regime in place.


Archive | 2012

Macrofinancial Modeling at Central Banks: Recent Developments and Future Directions

Jan Vlcek; Scott Roger

This paper surveys dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models with financial frictions in use by central banks and discusses priorities for future development of such models for the purpose of monetary and financial stability analysis. It highlights the need to develop macrofinancial models which allow analysis of the macroeconomic effects of macroprudential policy tools and to evaluate elements of the Basel III reforms as a priority. The paper also reviews the main approaches to introducing financial frictions into general equilibrium models.


Money Targeting in a Modern Forecasting and Policy Analysis System : an Application to Kenya | 2013

Money Targeting in a Modern Forecasting and Policy Analysis System: An Application to Kenya

Michal Andrle; Andrew Berg; Enrico Berkes; Rafael Portillo; Jan Vlcek; R. Armando Morales

We extend the framework in Andrle and others (2013) to incorporate an explicit role for money targets and target misses in the analysis of monetary policy in low-income countries (LICs), with an application to Kenya. We provide a general specification that can nest various types of money targeting (ranging from targets based on optimal money demand forecasts to those derived from simple money growth rules), interest-rate based frameworks, and intermediate cases. Our framework acknowledges that ex-post adherence to targets is in itself an objective of policy in LICs; here we provide a novel interpretation of target misses in terms of structural shocks (aggregate demand, policy, shocks to money demand, etc). In the case of Kenya, we find that: (i) the setting of money targets is consistent with money demand forecasting, (ii) targets have not played a systematic role in monetary policy, and (iii) target misses mainly reflect shocks to money demand. Simulations of the model under alternative policy specifications show that the stronger the ex-post target adherence, the greater the macroeconomic volatility. Our findings highlight the benefits of a model-based approach to monetary policy analysis in LICs, including in countries with money-targeting frameworks.


Eastern European Economics | 2017

Banks' Adjustment to Basel III Reform : A Bank-Level Perspective for Emerging Europe

Michal Andrle; Vladimír Tomšík; Jan Vlcek

The strategies of commercial banks are identified in response to higher capital requirements imposed by the Basel III reform. The focus will be on a sample of nine EU emerging market countries where the behavior of the five largest banks in each country will be examined. It was found that all banking sectors raised capital adequacy ratios by about 6.5 pp on average, mainly through retained earnings. Worries raised at the early stage of discussions about Basel III that commercial banks would shrink their balance sheet by reducing their lending to meet stricter capital requirements materialized only in banks struggling with profitability.


Archive | 2009

Implementing the New Structural Model of the Czech National Bank

Michal Andrle; Tibor Hledik; Ondra Kamenik; Jan Vlcek


Staff Reports | 2011

BASEL III: long-term impact on economic performance and fluctuations

Paolo Angelini; Laurent Clerc; Vasco Cúrdia; Leonardo Gambacorta; Andrea Gerali; Alberto Locarno; Roberto Motto; Werner Roeger; Skander Van den Heuvel; Jan Vlcek


Occasional Publications - Edited Volumes | 2017

Effects of Monetary Policy

Jan Bruha; Jaromír Tonner; Mojmir Hampl; Tomas Havranek; Mirko Djukic; Tibor Hledik; Jiri Polansky; Ljubica Trajcev; Jan Vlcek; Ruslan Aliyev; Dana Hajkova; Ivana Kubicova

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Michal Andrle

International Monetary Fund

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Andrew Berg

Indiana University Bloomington

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Rafael Portillo

International Monetary Fund

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R. Armando Morales

International Monetary Fund

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Scott Roger

International Monetary Fund

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Luisa Charry

International Monetary Fund

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Leonardo Gambacorta

Bank for International Settlements

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