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A Note on Mundell-Fleming and Developing Countries

Weeks, John

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Authors

John Weeks



Abstract

This paper inspects the statement found in macroeconomic text books that under a flexible exchange rate regime with perfectly elastic capital flows monetary policy is effective and fiscal policy is not. The logical validity of the statement requires that the domestic price level effect of devaluation be ignored. The price level effect is noted in some textbooks, but not analysed. When it is subjected to a rigorous analysis, the interaction between exchange rate changes and domestic price level changes render the standard statement false. The logically correct statement would be, under a flexible exchange rate regime with perfectly elastic capital flows the effectiveness of monetary policy depends on the values of the import share and the sum of the trade elasticities. Monetary policy will be more effective than fiscal policy if and only if the sum of the trade elasticities exceeds the import share. Inspection of data from developing countries indicates a low effectiveness of monetary policy under flexible exchange rates. In the more general case of less than perfectly elastic capital flows the conditions for monetary policy to be more effective than fiscal policy are even more restrictive. Use of empirical evidence on trade shares and interest rate differentials suggest that for most countries fiscal policy would prove more effective than monetary policy under a flexible exchange rate regime. In any case, the general theoretical assertion that monetary policy is more effective is incorrect.

Citation

Weeks, J. A Note on Mundell-Fleming and Developing Countries. London

Working Paper Type Working Paper
Deposit Date Apr 8, 2021
Publicly Available Date Apr 8, 2021
Pages 1-21
Series ISSN 17535816
Publisher URL https://www.soas.ac.uk/economics/research/workingpapers/file43192.pdf
Related Public URLs https://ideas.repec.org/p/soa/wpaper/155.html

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