Uruguay; Selected Issues
This paper examines the inflation expectations, monetary policy credibility, and dollarization. Country fundamentals have explained variation in sovereign spreads, but external factors play an important role. This paper assesses the role of and prospects for bank-lending from a cyclical and structural perspectives. A model calibrated for Uruguay, a financially dollarized economy, suggests that reserves are nearing optimal prudential levels. The results of a modified Merton framework, applied to the case of the Uruguayan banking system, appear to be promising for countries without equity markets.
Year of publication: |
2008-02-01
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Institutions: | International Monetary Fund (IMF) ; International Monetary Fund |
Subject: | Bank credit | Banking systems | Dollarization | External financing | Financial systems | Selected issues | inflation | monetary policy | central bank | inflation process | monetary fund | inflation forecasts | inflationary expectations | inflation dynamics | monetary economics | inflation target | inflation rate | money growth | actual inflation | annual inflation | inflation targeting | high inflation | foreign currency | monetary targets | foreign exchange | inflation objective | low inflation | coefficient on inflation | monetary aggregates | fall in inflation | real wages | rational expectations | monetary authorities |
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