Hemlock for policy response: Monetary policy, exchange rates and labour unions in SEE and CIS during the crisis
By: Petreski, Marjan.
Contributor(s): Jovanović, Branimir.
Material type:
BookSeries: wiiw Balkan Observatory Working Papers: 104Publisher: Wien : Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche (wiiw), 2012Subject(s): monetary policy | fixed exchange rate | wages | unionisation | SEE | CIS | crisisCountries covered: CIS | SEEClassification: E52 | F0 | J51 | P20 Online resources: Click here to access online Summary: The objective of this paper is to assess how the level of unionisation and the rigidity of the exchange rate affects wages and monetary policy in South-East Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States, with a particular focus on the recent economic crisis. Towards that end, a New Keynesian model with price and wage rigidities is used. Results suggest that fixed exchange rate and strong trade unions seem to constrain monetary policy in these countries, because monetary policy responded counter-cyclically during the crisis only in countries with weak trade unions and countries with flexible exchange rate. Also, findings point out that trade unions may be more effective for controlling inflation in these countries than the monetary authorities.
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| Paper | WIIW Library | 104 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 1000010003190 |
The objective of this paper is to assess how the level of unionisation and the rigidity of the exchange rate affects wages and monetary policy in South-East Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States, with a particular focus on the recent economic crisis. Towards that end, a New Keynesian model with price and wage rigidities is used. Results suggest that fixed exchange rate and strong trade unions seem to constrain monetary policy in these countries, because monetary policy responded counter-cyclically during the crisis only in countries with weak trade unions and countries with flexible exchange rate. Also, findings point out that trade unions may be more effective for controlling inflation in these countries than the monetary authorities.
