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Facing the Quadrilemma: Taylor Rules, Intervention Policy and Capital Controls in Large Emerging Markets

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  • Fernando Chertman

    (University of California, Santa Cruz)

  • Michael Hutchison

    (University of California, Santa Cruz)

  • David Zink

    (University of California, Santa Cruz)

Abstract

This paper investigates extended Taylor rules and foreign exchange intervention functions in large Emerging Markets (EM), measuring the extent to which policies are designed to stabilize output, inflation, exchange rates and accumulate international reserves. We focus on two large emerging markets--India and Brazil. We also consider the impact of greater capital account openness and which rules dominate when policy conflicts arise. We find that output stabilization is a dominant characteristic of interest rate policy in India, as is inflation targeting in Brazil. Both countries actively use intervention policy to achieve exchange rate stabilization and, at times, stabilizing reserves around a target level tied to observable economic fundamentals. Large unpredicted intervention purchases (sales) accommodate low (high) interest rates, suggesting that external operations are subordinate to domestic policy objectives. We extend the work to Chile and China for purposes of comparison. Chile’s policy functions are similar to Brazil, while China pursues policies that substantially diverge from other EMs.

Suggested Citation

  • Fernando Chertman & Michael Hutchison & David Zink, 2019. "Facing the Quadrilemma: Taylor Rules, Intervention Policy and Capital Controls in Large Emerging Markets," GRU Working Paper Series GRU_2019_016, City University of Hong Kong, Department of Economics and Finance, Global Research Unit.
  • Handle: RePEc:cth:wpaper:gru_2019_016
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