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Effects of fiscal policy on the conduct and transmission mechanism of monetary policy in Mauritius Abstract In view of analyzing the effects of fiscal policy on the conduct and transmission mechanism of monetary policy in Mauritius, this paper reviews key features of the operational framework for fiscal and monetary policies and interaction between the two main policy authorities, providing a brief description of the evolution over the years. The trend in monetary policy as well as fiscal policy and their impact on various macroeconomic variables are analyzed to identify the effectiveness and constraints of the current macroeconomic framework. By Dooneshsingh Audit1 The views expressed in this paper are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Bank of Mauritius. I am grateful to colleagues participating at the validation workshop organized by the COMESA Monetary Institute, in particular, Mr. Chileshe Mumbi Patrick and Dr. Mustafa Mohamed Abdalla, for their valuable comments and suggestions on the draft version of this paper. General disclaimer applies. 1 1 Contents Introduction Section I: Theoretical and Empirical Literature Section II: Evolution and features of Monetary Policy Section III: Evolution and features of Fiscal Policy Section IV: Analysing the interaction between Monetary Policy and Fiscal Policy Section V: Comparing current monetary policy framework with best practice Section VI: Monetary policy framework and Inflation expectations Section VII: Has monetary policy accommodated fiscal policy? Section VIII: Putting all the pieces together and Policy Recommendations 2 Introduction The macroeconomic policy practice in Mauritius has undergone several transformation during the course of its development. The evidence until now suggests that those changes have worked well for the country with each stage of development being somewhat well-prepared by conscious decision-making in terms of policy design and implementation. While the design and practice of monetary and fiscal policies have undergone several conversions over the course of the economic development of Mauritius, the country has maintained an overall policy mix that is credible and delivered a number of positive outcomes. The evolution of the structure of coordination between monetary and fiscal policies has adapted to the different needs of the stages of development. The current structure of coordination between monetary and fiscal policies rests upon a well-developed banking and financial sector that has allowed the price discovery process for the government debt securities to work relatively efficiently. This essential feature allows monetary policy to operate independently focusing on the objective of maintaining price stability and promoting orderly and balance economic development. Section I: Theoretical and Empirical Literature The very existence of fiscal and monetary policies of a country is to generate welfare gains for its citizens. Welfare gains could be in terms of full employment, low inflation, contained income inequalities and sustainable development. Most of the decisions related to achieving these objectives rest with the fiscal authorities while monetary authorities provide service to these objectives by ensuring that some of the conditions for fulfillment for these objectives are put in place. This assertion can be traced back to the origins of monetary policy. However, the limits of fiscal action are set by the resources available to the country, more precisely, the intertemporal budget of the country. When government revenues fall short of government expenditure for its efforts towards desirable objectives, the government borrows in one time period for repayment in later time periods. This process is sustainable as long as the government commands credibility over the ability to repay its debts, which in turn depends on the level of existing debt, proposed size of fiscal deficit, debt servicing conditions, size of the economy and the rate at which it is growing. The government can thus borrow as long as there is a demand for its bonds or other forms of securities. If investors perceive the fiscal path of the government as unsustainable, they would rate government bonds as too risky and would thus either limit their exposure to such assets or lend at higher interest rates. Government borrowing thus is constrained by the real stock of government bonds investors are willing to hold and the interest rate on those bonds. The monetary authorities can influence these two constraints by adjusting the money base or influencing short-term interest rates. An increase in money supply, ceteris paribus, would cause 3 inflation to rise and the real stock of government bond held by investors to fall and thus induce them to demand more government bonds. Alternatively, an increase in money supply or through the adjustment of the key policy interest rate of the economy, interest rates could be depressed to relax the constraint on fiscal authorities. An increase in money supply could simultaneously have implications for the exchange rate, in terms of depreciation of the domestic currency that could lead to pick-up in inflation and again a fall in the real stock of government bonds held by investors. A depreciated currency also allow the government to reduce its financing cost with past debt having lower real value and increase its nominal revenue through ‘seignorage’, the inflation tax. Seignorage has its origins in ancient times when it represented a fee that the royal mint collected from the public to convert their holdings of bullion into coins. Other governments resorted to debasement, wherein government would call in the coins, melt them down and mix them with cheaper metals. The practice of debasement was widespread in the later years of the Roman empire and the French monarchs in the fifteenth century, unable to collect more normal taxes, used debasement as a form of inflation tax to finance the ‘Hundred Years War with the English’. Intrinsically, the modern time ‘seignorage’ is no different from those practices, with government debt contracted at a value of money more than the value of money that it is being repaid through inflation, although the net effect is partly mitigated through payment of interest. With seignorage providing support to fiscal policy, the policy debate moved to whether fiscal policy and monetary policy were independent or some form of influence was being exerted by the fiscal authority on monetary policy or some coordination prevailed between monetary and fiscal authorities with both having predetermined objective. This literature revolves around the issue of ‘rules versus discretion’ and ‘independence of the central bank’. Another strand of this literature builds on the seminal paper by Sargent and Wallace (1981) that argues that even if fiscal policy and monetary policy are set independently, the monetary authority will have to adjust to restore equilibrium after some lags. Sargent and Wallace (1981) introduce the concept of “monetary dominant” regime, where the monetary authorities independently set monetary policy and “fiscal dominant” regime, where the fiscal authority independently sets the budget with implications for inter-temporal budget constraints on monetary policy. They show that even under monetary dominance, tighter monetary policy in one time period leads to loose monetary policy in later period due to the need to pay interest on bonds issued and the continuous growth of the economy. With tighter monetary policy and continuously expanding economy, fiscal levers might become exhausted, constrained by either higher interest cost or ability to issue additional government bonds. Ultimately, the monetary authority has to respond by making monetary policy loose. Sargent and Wallace (1981) rational has been deepened and been confirmed by other models and growing mix of empirical and theoretical papers. Canzoneri, Cumby and Diba (1997) and others show that when the inter-temporal budget constraint is set, the price level remains the only variable that can adjust to restore equilibrium. Along these lines, papers in the literature attempt 4 to provide answers to whether the price level is determined by the needs of fiscal solvency – this group of literature has been referred as ‘the fiscal theory of the price level’. The first-generation models of balance of payments crises show how the inconsistency between fiscal policy fundamentals and the exchange rate peg leads to abandonment of the peg (Krugman, 1979). The impact of fiscal fundamentals on the exchange rate has been shown in the literature, not only through theoretical models, but also in documentation of various crises. Even with managed floating regime, if an important part of the government debt is in foreign currency, fiscal mismanagement has ultimately led to crises. Directly or indirectly, fiscal policy has important implications for monetary policy. Fiscal solvency have various implications for the overall credibility of the policy framework in place in a country and weighs significantly on the prices in the economy, including interest rate, sovereign spreads and the exchange rate. Higher deficits are generally associated with higher medium term and long-term interest rates. Unsustainable fiscal path, if not resolved lead to crises. Government debt to GDP that exceeds a certain threshold causes the country’s sovereign ratings to worsen and thus lead to wider spreads and higher interest rates. This in turn leads to depreciation of its currency and ultimately to higher inflation. The advent of inflation-targeting, emergence of ‘Taylor’s rule’ and more work on the benefits of independent central bank have brought new light on the coordination framework between monetary policy and fiscal policy. Investigating how fiscal policy affects monetary policy through estimates of their respective reaction functions over time, the literature essentially tries to verify whether fiscal policy directly influence monetary policy. Within an inflation-targeting regime, such direct effect can be safely ruled out, but the indirect effects are nonetheless present. For instance, Blanchard (2004) show that an increase in interest rate could lead to a deprecation of the domestic currency rather than its appreciation if the fiscal path becomes unsustainable and the risk of default increases following higher borrowing cost. Monetary policy cannot remain indifferent to such possibilities. While abuse in terms of influence on monetary authority should be avoided to protect the credibility of monetary policy and the overall policy regime, coordination between monetary policy and fiscal policy is a precondition to ensure objectives of both fiscal and monetary regimes are met. Therefore, a key objective of this paper is to verify whether monetary policy has been influenced by fiscal policy to accommodate the latter through the channels elaborated above. The paper will investigate whether decisions on the policy rate or the exchange rate were motivated by fiscal considerations. It will also try to evaluate whether the monetary authority has sacrificed its inflation objectives in favour of generating additional fiscal space. In this quest, the standards of independent monetary policy will be compared to the current practice to indicate whether the prerequisites of independent monetary policy have been in place or not. 5 Section II: Evolution and features of Monetary Policy Prior to 1991, monetary policy was conducted primarily by establishing an annual ceiling for the expansion of credit by banks and by imposing reserve requirements. The Bank also issued interest rate guidelines to banks. Lower lending rates were set for priority sectors. The Minister of Finance announced the Bank Rate and yield on Treasury Bills was set in relation to the Bank Rate. Over time such a system of direct controls brought in rigidities to the banking growth prospects and ultimately constrained economic prospects of the country. Mauritius embarked on a gradual process of financial liberalisation in the late 1980s. Exchange controls were removed in gradual steps until the suspension of the Exchange Control Act in July 1994 and a more flexible exchange regime replaced the previous basket-peg regime. Concomitantly, the Bank of Mauritius switched from direct control to indirect monetary management. In fiscal year 1996-97, the Bank started announcing an inflation objective in its annual report. To establish open market operations for monetary policy purposes and to improve liquidity management, the Bank of Mauritius in December 1999 introduced a Lombard facility and a framework for repurchase and reverse repurchase transactions. The Lombard facility was a standing facility to provide overnight collaterised advances to banks at preannounced interest rate. It was used by the Bank as a signalling mechanism for its monetary stance. Transactions under the Lombard facility halted around mid-2003 as the interbank rate fell below the Lombard rate. The regime that prevailed, however, was far from being an inflation targeting regime as the targets changed every year and there was no clear link between the changes in policy rates and the inflation outcomes. On 18 December 2006, the Bank introduced a new framework for the conduct of monetary policy with the Key Repo Rate (KRR) acting as the policy rate to signal its monetary stance. The promulgation of the Bank of Mauritius Act 2004 in June 2005 allowed for institutional independence for the conduct of monetary policy with provisions included in the Act for the setting-up of a Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) and on 23 April 2007, the MPC was launched. In view of providing further independence to the MPC, the Bank of Mauritius Act 2004 was amended in August 2007 to empower the MPC to formulate and take final decision on the monetary policy instead of having to submit its findings and recommendations to the Board of Directors of the Bank, which took the final monetary policy decision. As the experience of the MPC grew, its composition and proceedings have been fine-tuned to improve its performance and the Bank of Mauritius Act 2004 was accordingly amended. Table 1 provides in brief the inflation outcomes registered in Mauritius. 6 Table 1: A historical perspective on headline inflation Note: December and June figures used for computing the Means and Standard Deviations. The analytical Table 1 on headline inflation is to provide an overall view of the experience of economic agents with inflation in Mauritius and have comparable historical figures. The period 1990-2009 limits the time frame so as to include only the liberalised phase of the economy. The period 1994-2009 is included in the table to note the difference in average inflation since exchange control was abolished in 1994. The period 1999-2009 marks a remarkable attempt on embarking on inflation-targeting approach in the conduct of monetary policy. Another break is introduced in 2007, the year of the introduction of the MPC. Due to exceptional events in 2007 and 2008 with significant hikes in commodity prices and outbreak of global financial crisis, the period 2009-2013 is considered to have a better sense of the ‘normalised’ inflation rate. Post the global financial crisis, monetary policy globally has been significantly accommodative with the focus on reviving growth and as a result of the later years of mild inflation and vulnerable growth revival. This backdrop has allowed Mauritius to pursue accommodative monetary policy and adjust the structure of interest rate downward. The MPC occasionally used its change in monetary stance to build its credibility as an inflation7 fighter. The focus of the MPC on its mandate has allowed inflation expectations to be anchored. Chart 1 shows the evolution of the KRR and inflation (Headline and Year-on-year) in Mauritius. Chart 1: The KRR and Inflation (Headline and Year-on-year) Section III: Evolution and features of Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy in Mauritius has been guided by the needs of the country at the different stages of its development. In the late 1970’s, like many underdeveloped countries in the world at that time, Mauritius was a monocrop economy, largely dependent on sugar production and exports. Government revenue was thus constrained by the size of the economy and averaged around 22% of GDP. Government expenditure, however, as a percentage of GDP was around 30% of GDP. The almost 8% gap between government revenue and government expenditure made the country vulnerable to the price of a single exports on the world market – Sugar. Overall fiscal deficit averaged 11% of GDP and a major fall in the price of sugar led to an economic crisis. Mauritius sought and obtained support from IMF stand-by facility in 1982-83 to the tune of Rs728.6 million, representing 6% of GDP to undertake several reforms and embarked into a phase of market liberalisation and diversification of the economy. As part of the reform package, the Mauritian rupee was devalued twice, sales tax was introduced and subsidies were reduced. The reforms paid off handsomely with the economy growing at over 5.5% annually and government expenditure brought down to around 25% of GDP, resulting into significant 8 improvement of the fiscal path. The fiscal deficit decreased from a peak of 13.7% of GDP in 1980/81 to a trough of 1.1% of GDP in 1987/88. Within that time frame, the government also repaid a sizable share of its foreign debts, in particular that owed to the IMF. Budgetary central government external debt declined from 33.6% of GDP in 1984/85 to 16.2% of GDP in 1989/90 while budgetary central government internal debt decreased from 45.6% of GDP to 38.8% of GDP over the same period. Chart 2: Government Revenue and Expenditure as a % of GDP Chart 3: Fiscal Deficit as a % of GDP and Inflation 9 The improvement of the fiscal path and reforms undertaken led to a more diversified economy and restored macroeconomic balance in the economy. Inflation that had shot to a peak of 26.5% in 1980/81, following the devaluation of the domestic currency, fell to a low of 0.7% in 1986/87. From an average fiscal deficit of 6.3% in the 1980’s, the 1990’s recorded an average fiscal deficit of almost half of that size at 3.3%. Chart 4: Budgetary Central Government Debt as % of GDP Over the course of the evolution of the fiscal path, the authorities undertook continuous improvement of the tax regime by enhancing tax collection and administration and rationalizing various levers of the tax. Introduction of new tax policies and rationalization of government expenditure have generally been perceived as adverse to the public, even those that were meant to actually reduce the number of tax payers and the per unit cost of government expenditure of the economy. Strong leadership at the helm of governments and proper implementation of various tax reforms have succeeded in demonstrating the positive impact on the economy of several reforms carried out. These include the introduction of Sales tax in 1982, Pay As You Earned (PAYE) in early 1990’s, Value-Added-Tax in 1998 and the ‘single-rate’ tax system in 2006-07. Along with these reforms, the income and corporate taxes were significantly reduced from rates as high as 30-40% in the 1980’s and 1990’s to the current single rate of 15%, in line with the focus of encouraging work, production and efforts. The rationalization of the tax regime allowed the direct tax rates to be reduced, while those of indirect taxes to be contained. Simultaneously, inefficient price controls and subsidies were eliminated. Post-1990’s Mauritius was endowed with a more diversified economy and developed financial system with more liquid and sound banks and the emergence of several type of other financial intermediaries. These led to the development of deeper money markets and allowed the country 10 to rely less on foreign borrowing and seek its financing needs internally. The 2006-07 reforms appear to have caused another important break in fiscal management in Mauritius – interest payments on government debt fell from 17.8% of total government expenditure to 11.0% of total government expenditure as shown in Chart 5, thus allowing government expenditure on other items to increase. Chart 5: Share of Interest Payments and Current Expenditure in Total Government Expenditure Chart 6: Share of foreign grants in Total Government Revenue 11 Another key development in fiscal policy has been the promulgation of the Public Debt Management Act 2008 that limits the ratio of public debt to GDP to 60% and has a provision that requires that this ratio be reduced to 50% by 31 December 2018 and remains so for subsequent years. It also provides for any rise in the percentage at the end of a fiscal year not to exceed 2% by reference to the percentage in respect of the previous fiscal year. These provisions strengthen fiscal discipline in the country and ensure that the country remains on a prudent fiscal path. During the course of its economic development, Mauritius has benefitted from foreign grants in support of reforms that have been undertaken. In the 1980’s, they helped the economy cope with the market reforms under way in liberalising the economy and in 2000’s, supported the economy to manage sugar sector reforms and the transition phase following the end of the Multi-Fibre Agreement and ACP-EU Sugar Protocol. Foreign grants have supported the government budget, but have been temporary features of the budget, in important size. As shown in Chart 6, foreign grants as a share of total revenue peaked at 5.7% in 1985/86 before falling to around 1% and then rising to 4.4% in 2008/09. Section IV: Analysing the type of coordination between monetary policy and fiscal policy In order to evaluate the type of coordination between monetary policy and fiscal policy, we apply models that have been documented in the literature review to the Mauritian economy. Annual, quarterly and monthly data have been used to verify different possibilities and make appropriate conclusion over the nature of coordination between monetary policy and fiscal policy. Annual analysis Using Annual data between 1977 and 2014, the relationships among fiscal deficit, inflation, exchange rate have been investigated. The variables used for the annual analysis are fiscal balance as a percentage of GDP, interest rate, inflation and log of the exchange rate of the dollar vis-à-vis the Mauritian rupee. The interest rate used is the estimate of an implied interest rate based on interest payments and government debt. A deterioration of the fiscal path is expected to lead to higher interest rates to compensate for higher risks and higher inflation. Depreciation of the domestic currency, i.e. an increase in Rs/USD, as has been shown in the literature, could support fiscal balance through the impact of ‘seignorage’ and raising revenue through higher import duties collected and added taxes on profits of export enterprises. While the negative correlation with inflation and positive correlation with LOG(Rs/USD) is confirmed for the years 1977 to 2014, interest rate and fiscal balance have been weakly positively correlated with a coefficient of 0.18. Ordinary least squares (OLS) regressions were estimated with inflation as the dependent variable in Equation 1(a) and with fiscal balance as the dependent variable in Equation 2. All variables in the regressions have been tested for unit root and observed not to have unit root. 12 INFLATION= 5.16 – 0.730 FISCAL+ 1.093 INTEREST – 2.924 LOG(RS/USD) (t-statistics) (0.51) (-2.24) (1.50) R2 = 0.39 (-1.32) Equation 1(a) D.W. = 1.53 Given that the constant term in Equation 1(a) is not statistically significant, it is dropped to estimate Equation 1(b). However, the inferences drawn remain the same except that interest rate become statistically significant and the fit improves mildly. INFLATION= - 0.849 FISCAL+1.345 INTEREST – 1.975 LOG(RS/USD) (t-statistics) (-3.84) (2.55) (-1.687) R2 = 0.38 Equation 1(b) D.W. = 1.54 Correlation Matrix I FISCAL BALANCE FISCAL BALANCE IMPLIED INTEREST INFLATION MURUSD LMURUSD IMPLIED INTEREST INFLATION MURUSD LMURUSD 1.00 0.18 -0.54 0.55 0.66 0.18 1.00 0.15 -0.17 -0.04 -0.54 0.15 1.00 -0.49 -0.53 0.55 -0.17 -0.49 1.00 0.98 0.66 -0.04 -0.53 0.98 1.00 FISCAL = -18.90 – 0.176 INFLATION +0.720 INTEREST – 3.527 LOG(RS/USD) (t-statistics) (-4.91) (-2.24) (2.06) R2 = 0.55 (3.76) Equation 2 D.W. = 0.63 The expected inverse relationship between fiscal balance and inflation is verified in both Equation 1 and 2 at 5% level of significance. However, the inverse relationship between interest rate and inflation, and the impact of depreciation of the domestic currency on inflation have not 13 been confirmed. Even the sign of their respective coefficients are opposite to what would have been expected. The reason for the non-significance and abnormal sign of the coefficient could be due to the fact that the interest rate and exchange rate used in the regressions are annual averages such that the short-term dynamism registered by them during the year could have been offset. Another reason could be the restrictive sample size of only 38 observations. Reaction function of the central bank since the setting-up of the MPC Using quarterly data between 2008Q3 and 2015Q1, the reaction function of the central bank has been estimated with the Key Repo Rate (KRR) as the dependent variable, and inflation, log(GDP) and primary balance as a percentage of GDP (PB) as independent variables. Equation 3 shows that both inflation and LGDP depict the expected relationships reflecting KRR adjustments were guided by inflation and growth concerns. Higher inflation caused the KRR to go up while lower GDP growth led to cuts in the KRR. Primary balance as a percentage of GDP is not found to be significant in the regression, indicating monetary policy might not have accommodated fiscal needs. The regression nonetheless has some shortcoming with LGDP having a unit root and the sample size being 27 variables only. But, the tentative conclusions from the regression can be substantiated by the minutes of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meetings and the fact that for some period the yield on treasury bills were disconnected with the KRR as a result of lingering excess liquidity. KRR = 30.68 + 0.206 INFLATION - 2.370 LGDP + 0.055 PB (t-stat) (2.50) (3.95) (-2.16) (1.82) R2 = 0.60 Equation 3 D.W. = 1.21 In Equation 4, a model closer to Taylor’s rule is estimated with the dependent variable KRR and independent variables inflation gap, output gap and primary balance as a percentage of GDP. Only inflation gap is found to be statistically significant in the estimated reaction function of the Central Bank. All variables in Equation 4 regressions have been tested for unit root and observed not to have unit root. KRR = 5.36 + 0.191 INFLATION GAP + 0.480 OUTPUT GAP + 0.066 PB (t-stat) (39.06) (3.00) (0.26) R2 = 0.36 (1.69) D.W. = 0.47 14 Equation 4 These results suggest that for under the current structure in place, monetary authority has been functioning independently and not tried to accommodate fiscal policy. The coordination between monetary and fiscal authorities is more to do with macroeconomic objectives than the financing needs of the government. This arrangement provides confidence to financial markets and investors in general, and dismisses any risk of crowding out. Analysing short-term dynamics impacting on inflation outcome Monthly data for the period June 2006 to January 2015 have been collected to assess the impact of external factors, in particular, international commodity prices and monetary variables, namely, growth in broad money liabilities and the exchange rate on inflation. Compared to the annual and quarterly estimations, this model has the advantage of a larger sample size of 104 observations and it is expected to make up for the limitations of the other two models in capturing short-term dynamics that influence inflation. All variables in Equation 5 regressions have been tested for unit root and only YTM3 has been observed to have unit root. FAO = Monthly FAO food price index BML = 12-month moving average of monthly growth rates of Broad Money Liabilities RS_USD = Monthly Average Exchange rate of the US dollar vis-à-vis the Mauritian rupee YTM3 = Monthly weighted average yield on 91-day Treasury Bills INFLATION = -15.38 + 3.68 BML + 0.29 RS_USD + 0.72 YTM3 + 0.03 FAO (t-statistics) (-3.87) (12.64) (3.14) R2 = 0.91 (16.67) (5.24) Equation 5 D.W. = 0.45 In Equation 5, all the independent variables are statistically significant indicating that they could impact on inflation. However, the positive coefficient that is again observed for interest rate, here with a coefficient of +0.72 for YTM3, is intriguing. The correlation coefficient between INFLATION and YTM3 is also positive at 0.85. One explanation could be that both the aggregate demand channel through which lower borrowing costs cause prices to rise and the exchange rate channel through which lower returns on domestic bonds cause the exchange rate to depreciate as a result of capital outflows have not been working during the period under study. Instead, it could be that lower borrowing cost could in effect be reducing cost of production and doing business such that businesses were able to keep prices contained or even lower prices to 15 adapt to the lackluster conditions prevailing globally post the global financial crisis. These tentative conclusions could explain part of the reason why persistently low borrowing cost did not lead to higher prices. The coefficients obtained in Equation 5 could however be biased and inconsistent due to the presence of serial correlation as depicted by the low Durbin-Watson statistics. Moreover, persistence of low inflation could have anchored inflation expectations at a lower range that had, in turn, built into a virtuous cycle of low inflation and low borrowing cost. For Mauritius, this could in effect be very much the case and the work of Blanchard (2004) provides theoretical underpinnings for such a possibility. But these outcomes are dependent on several factors at work simultaneously and need not hold permanently. Correlation Matrix II INFLATION FAO YTM3 LUSD RS_USD BML INFLATION 1.00 -0.36 0.85 -0.03 -0.01 0.77 FAO -0.36 1.00 -0.62 -0.73 -0.74 -0.17 YTM3 0.85 -0.62 1.00 0.15 0.17 0.49 LUSD -0.03 -0.73 0.15 1.00 1.00 -0.15 RS_USD -0.01 -0.74 0.17 1.00 1.00 -0.14 BML 0.77 -0.17 0.49 -0.15 -0.14 1.00 Mauritius is a small open economy that imports most of its food and energy needs and act as price taker in all markets. The impact of international commodity prices weighs considerably on inflation as depicted by the high statistical significance of FAO, despite a negative correlation coefficient between FAO and INFLATION at -0.36 for the period under study. But without money growth and exchange rate effect, the impact on inflation could be restricted. Indeed, BML and RS_USD cause inflation to rise and if they both were to evolve in opposite direction to FAO, inflation would overwhelmingly be contained. The presence of serial correlation in Equation 5 was expected given the fact that the data used are monthly time series. Some of the relationships observed could be the result of a combination of factors rather than indicating causality and might not therefore hold in the long run. Pairwise graphs of each factor as well as pairwise Granger causality tests have been undertaken to evaluate the relationships between the independent variables in Equation 5 and inflation. 16 Chart 7: Credit to private sector growth, BML and Inflation 2 12 10 1.5 8 1 6 0.5 4 Oct-14 May-14 Dec-13 Jul-13 Feb-13 Sep-12 Apr-12 Nov-11 Jun-11 Jan-11 Aug-10 Mar-10 Oct-09 May-09 Dec-08 Jul-08 Feb-08 Sep-07 Apr-07 Nov-06 Jun-06 0 -0.5 2 0 Credit to Private sector growth BML INFLATION Pairwise Granger Causality Tests: BML and Inflation Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 3 Null Hypothesis: Obs F-Statistic Prob. BML does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause BML 101 2.73367 3.66557 0.0480 0.0151 Obs F-Statistic Prob. 98 1.40991 2.08121 0.2203 0.0638 Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 6 Null Hypothesis: BML does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause BML Chart 7 suggests that broad money liabilities growth (BML) could influence inflation significantly as depicted by the similar trends in BML and Inflation. Credit to private sector growth, a component of BML, is also illustrated in Chart 7 in view of its importance in driving economic activities in the country. Granger causality tests indicate that BML could cause inflation in the short run, but in the relatively longer run, the influence would decrease. 17 Chart 8: Exchange rate (Rs/USD) and Inflation 35 12 34 10 33 32 8 31 30 6 29 4 28 27 2 26 Rs/USD Oct-14 May-14 Dec-13 Jul-13 Feb-13 Sep-12 Apr-12 Nov-11 Jun-11 Jan-11 Aug-10 Mar-10 Oct-09 May-09 Dec-08 Jul-08 Feb-08 Sep-07 Apr-07 Nov-06 0 Jun-06 25 INFLATION Pairwise Granger Causality Tests: Rs/USD and Inflation Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 3 Null Hypothesis: Obs F-Statistic Prob. RS_USD does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause RS_USD 101 1.50303 0.07326 0.2188 0.9742 Obs F-Statistic Prob. 98 3.28609 0.87151 0.0059 0.5194 Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 6 Null Hypothesis: RS_USD does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause RS_USD Chart 8 illustrates an ambiguous relationship between the exchange rate (Rs/USD) and inflation with no clear association of their respective trends. However, Granger causality tests indicate that Rs/USD could cause inflation with six months lag, but not in three months. 18 Chart 9: Weighted interest rate on 91-day Treasury bills (YTM3) and Inflation 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 INFLATION Oct-14 May-14 Dec-13 Jul-13 Feb-13 Sep-12 Apr-12 Nov-11 Jun-11 Jan-11 Aug-10 Mar-10 Oct-09 May-09 Dec-08 Jul-08 Feb-08 Sep-07 Apr-07 Nov-06 Jun-06 0 YTM3 Pairwise Granger Causality Tests: Interest rate and Inflation Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 3 Null Hypothesis: Obs F-Statistic Prob. YTM3 does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause YTM3 101 1.87938 2.45371 0.1384 0.0680 Obs F-Statistic Prob. 98 1.74483 1.61626 0.1205 0.1525 Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 6 Null Hypothesis: YTM3 does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause YTM3 Chart 9 illustrates a close relationship between the interest rate (YTM3) and inflation, but the positive correlation is intriguing and could be the result of a combination of factors during the time under study than depicting a regular relationship. It will be investigated further. At 5% level of significance, Granger causality tests indicate that YTM3 might not cause inflation. 19 Chart 10: FAO food price index and Inflation 260 12 240 10 220 8 200 180 6 160 4 140 2 120 FAO Oct-14 May-14 Dec-13 Jul-13 Feb-13 Sep-12 Apr-12 Nov-11 Jun-11 Jan-11 Aug-10 Mar-10 Oct-09 May-09 Dec-08 Jul-08 Feb-08 Sep-07 Apr-07 Nov-06 0 Jun-06 100 INFLATION Pairwise Granger Causality Tests: FAO food price index and Inflation Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 3 Null Hypothesis: Obs F-Statistic Prob. FAO does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause FAO 101 0.94550 0.63577 0.4220 0.5938 Obs F-Statistic Prob. 98 2.50672 1.23716 0.0278 0.2956 Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 6 Null Hypothesis: FAO does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause FAO Chart 10 shows a close relationship in the trends of FAO food price index and inflation. Granger causality tests indicate that FAO food price index could cause inflation in the relatively longer run, but not in three months. 20 Chart 11: ICE Brent and Inflation 160 12 140 10 120 8 100 80 6 60 4 40 2 20 ICE Brent Oct-14 May-14 Dec-13 Jul-13 Feb-13 Sep-12 Apr-12 Nov-11 Jun-11 Jan-11 Aug-10 Mar-10 Oct-09 May-09 Dec-08 Jul-08 Feb-08 Sep-07 Apr-07 Nov-06 0 Jun-06 0 INFLATION Pairwise Granger Causality Tests: Oil prices (ICE Brent) and Inflation Sample: 2006M06 2015M01 Lags: 3 Null Hypothesis: Obs F-Statistic Prob. ICE_BRENT does not Granger Cause HEADLINE_INFLATION HEADLINE_INFLATION does not Granger Cause ICE_BRENT 101 2.75509 0.29808 0.0468 0.8267 Chart 11 shows a close relationship in the trends of ICE Brent and inflation. Granger causality test indicates clearly that ICE Brent could cause inflation. The next step is to carry out a Vector Error Correction Model (VECM) for the monthly variables to discern more precisely the short term and long term dynamics among the variables that impact on inflation outcomes. The benefits of estimating a VECM is that it addresses the issue of serial correlation, captures the information contained in lagged variables and produces more robust regression coefficient estimates. 21 Vector Error Correction Estimates Sample (adjusted): 2006M10 2015M01 Included observations: 100 after adjustments Standard errors in ( ) & t-statistics in [ ] Cointegrating Eq: CointEq1 HEADLINE_INFLATION(-1) 1.000000 BML(-1) -1.117495 (0.62350) [-1.79229] RS_USD(-1) 0.308043 (0.08439) [ 3.65045] YTM3(-1) -0.801826 (0.07322) [-10.9515] D(HEADLINE_I NFLATION) D(BML) D(RS_USD) D(YTM3) -0.073519 (0.01500) [-4.89985] -0.003772 (0.01318) [-0.28628] -0.016151 (0.06112) [-0.26425] 0.123834 (0.05909) [ 2.09586] 0.646562 (0.09935) [ 6.50812] -0.108960 (0.08725) [-1.24887] 0.278880 (0.40470) [ 0.68910] 0.610428 (0.39121) [ 1.56034] 0.169381 (0.12301) [ 1.37696] 0.078357 (0.10803) [ 0.72534] -0.206227 (0.50110) [-0.41155] 0.313398 (0.48440) [ 0.64698] -0.049066 (0.09237) [-0.53121] 0.107009 (0.08112) [ 1.31920] 0.028019 (0.37627) [ 0.07446] -0.680013 (0.36373) [-1.86957] D(BML(-1)) 0.063912 (0.12621) [ 0.50638] -0.028232 (0.11084) [-0.25471] -0.057952 (0.51414) [-0.11272] -0.142994 (0.49701) [-0.28771] D(BML(-2)) 0.382830 (0.11628) [ 3.29240] 0.018195 (0.10212) [ 0.17818] -0.478641 (0.47367) [-1.01050] -0.093234 (0.45788) [-0.20362] D(BML(-3)) 0.341404 (0.11858) [ 2.87914] -0.050754 (0.10414) [-0.48738] -0.594636 (0.48304) [-1.23102] -0.445318 (0.46695) [-0.95368] D(RS_USD(-1)) -0.022545 (0.02596) [-0.86832] 0.025846 (0.02280) [ 1.13352] 0.581366 (0.10577) [ 5.49659] 0.031636 (0.10224) [ 0.30941] Error Correction: CointEq1 D(HEADLINE_INFLATION( -1)) D(HEADLINE_INFLATION( -2)) D(HEADLINE_INFLATION( -3)) 22 D(RS_USD(-2)) 0.037743 (0.02837) [ 1.33024] -0.045587 (0.02492) [-1.82956] -0.302235 (0.11558) [-2.61493] -0.181816 (0.11173) [-1.62730] D(RS_USD(-3)) -0.015446 (0.02629) [-0.58746] -0.011921 (0.02309) [-0.51626] 0.327066 (0.10711) [ 3.05360] -0.046679 (0.10354) [-0.45083] D(YTM3(-1)) -0.034468 (0.02579) [-1.33668] -0.034409 (0.02265) [-1.51945] 0.262322 (0.10504) [ 2.49726] 0.505068 (0.10154) [ 4.97392] D(YTM3(-2)) 0.013737 (0.02855) [ 0.48121] -0.032626 (0.02507) [-1.30136] 0.036553 (0.11629) [ 0.31432] -0.142734 (0.11242) [-1.26969] D(YTM3(-3)) 0.029278 (0.02737) [ 1.06986] 0.020382 (0.02403) [ 0.84809] -0.161873 (0.11148) [-1.45206] 0.123994 (0.10776) [ 1.15062] LFAO 0.142294 (0.02946) [ 4.82939] 0.006955 (0.02588) [ 0.26878] 0.034466 (0.12003) [ 0.28715] -0.249629 (0.11603) [-2.15150] R-squared Adj. R-squared Sum sq. resids S.E. equation F-statistic Log likelihood Akaike AIC Schwarz SC Mean dependent S.D. dependent 0.892063 0.875747 1.152767 0.115777 54.67393 81.25639 -1.345128 -0.980404 -0.040000 0.328449 0.181819 0.058140 0.889063 0.101676 1.470089 94.24403 -1.604881 -1.240157 -0.001152 0.104767 0.395445 0.304059 19.12944 0.471631 4.327191 -59.19677 1.463935 1.828659 0.000894 0.565348 0.328175 0.226620 17.87571 0.455913 3.231508 -55.80749 1.396150 1.760874 -0.063600 0.518425 Determinant resid covariance (dof adj.) Determinant resid covariance Log likelihood Akaike information criterion Schwarz criterion 5.48E-06 3.00E-06 68.32669 -0.166534 1.396568 The VECM shows that broad money growth (BML) influences inflation with two and three months lag, but become insignificant over time and counterproductive at 10% level of significance. In contrast, exchange rate (Rs_USD) and interest rate (YTM3) become significant in the long run. Ceteris paribus, one unit of increase in Rs_USD (depreciation) causes inflation to rise by 0.31 unit while one unit increase in YTM3 causes inflation to fall by 0.80 unit in the long run. Further, FAO food price index has been observed to add to inflation. This would also be true for oil prices too, which is not included in the VECM due to the high correlation between ICE Brent and FAO that could cause multicollinearity problem. The results suggest that interest rate is the appropriate monetary instrument to control inflation, while exchange rate developments should be consistently monitored to achieve desirable inflation outcomes. 23 24 30 -.8 25 -.8 20 -.4 -.4 15 .0 .0 10 .4 .4 5 .8 .8 Response of YTM3 to HEADLINE_INFLATION 30 -0.4 25 -0.4 20 0.0 0.0 15 0.4 0.4 10 0.8 0.8 5 1.2 1.2 Response of RS_USD to HEADLINE_INFLATION -.08 30 -.08 25 -.04 -.04 20 .00 .00 15 .04 .04 10 .08 .08 5 .12 .12 Response of BML to HEADLINE_INFLATION 30 -.8 25 -.8 20 -.4 -.4 15 .0 .0 10 .4 .4 5 .8 .8 Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to HEADLINE_INFLATION 5 5 5 5 15 20 15 20 15 20 10 15 20 Response of YTM3 to BML 10 Response of RS_USD to BML 10 Response of BML to BML 10 25 25 25 25 30 30 30 30 -.8 -.4 .0 .4 .8 -0.4 0.0 0.4 0.8 1.2 -.08 -.04 .00 .04 .08 .12 -.8 -.4 .0 .4 .8 15 20 10 15 20 Response of BML to RS_USD 10 25 25 5 5 15 20 25 10 15 20 25 Response of YTM3 to RS_USD 10 Response of RS_USD to RS_USD 5 5 30 30 30 30 Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to RS_USD Response to Cholesky One S.D. Innovations Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to BML -.8 -.4 .0 .4 .8 -0.4 0.0 0.4 0.8 1.2 -.08 -.04 .00 .04 .08 .12 -.8 -.4 .0 .4 .8 5 5 5 5 15 20 15 20 25 25 15 20 10 15 20 Response of YTM3 to YTM3 10 25 25 Response of RS_USD to YTM3 10 Response of BML to YTM3 10 Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to YTM3 30 30 30 30 25 30 30 -20 25 -20 20 -10 -10 15 0 0 10 10 10 5 20 20 Accumulated Response of YTM3 to HEADLINE_INFLATION 30 -10 25 -10 20 0 0 15 10 10 10 20 20 5 30 30 Accumulated Response of RS_USD to HEADLINE_INFLATION -2 -2 30 -1 -1 25 0 0 20 1 1 15 2 2 10 3 3 5 4 4 Accumulated Response of BML to HEADLINE_INFLATION 25 -20 20 -20 15 -10 -10 10 0 0 5 10 10 15 20 25 10 15 20 25 10 15 20 25 5 10 15 20 25 Accumulated Response of YTM3 to BML 5 Accumulated Response of RS_USD to BML 5 Accumulated Response of BML to BML 5 30 30 30 30 -20 -10 0 10 20 -10 0 10 20 30 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 -20 -10 0 10 10 15 20 25 10 15 20 25 30 30 10 15 20 25 5 10 15 20 25 Accumulated Response of YTM3 to RS_USD 5 30 30 Accumulated Response of RS_USD to RS_USD 5 Accumulated Response of BML to RS_USD 5 Accumulated Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to RS_USD Accumulated Response to Cholesky One S.D. Innovations Accumulated Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to BML 10 Accumulated Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to HEADLINE_INFLATION -20 -10 0 10 20 -10 0 10 20 30 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 -20 -10 0 10 10 15 20 25 10 15 20 25 10 15 20 25 5 10 15 20 25 Accumulated Response of YTM3 to YTM3 5 Accumulated Response of RS_USD to YTM3 5 Accumulated Response of BML to YTM3 5 30 30 30 30 Accumulated Response of HEADLINE_INFLATION to YTM3 Flowchart 1: Factors impacting on Transmission Mechanism of Monetary Policy The transmission mechanism depicted in Flowchart 1 is helpful to recapitulate the findings from the empirical analysis. The regression analysis indicates that in the short run, the central bank can contain inflation by anchoring inflation expectations through its policy decisions, but that changes in policy rate become effective over time. It has further been shown that exogenous changes in fiscal policy, global economy and commodity prices influence price developments and thus impairs the functioning of the transmission mechanism. The regression results also confirm the considerable impact of exchange rate developments on inflation. It has also been shown that in the long run, interest rate is an appropriate monetary instrument for controlling inflation while control in money supply is effective only in the very short run. Persistence in tightening of money supply growth could over time become counterproductive – This is in line with Sargent and Wallace (1981) postulate. 26 Section V: Comparing current monetary policy framework with best practice Current arrangements in place for monetary policy are in line with international best practice as shown by Table 2. Nonetheless some further improvement need to be brought, on which the Bank is currently working on. Table 2: Comparing Current arrangements with Best Practices Best Rationale Current Practices Comments Arrangements Institutional Building Blocks Price stability enshrined in law as primary objective of the CB. Prevent developmental objectives from undermining the price stability objective. Section 5(2) of the Bank of Mauritius Act 2004 stipulates that the primary objective of the Bank is to maintain price stability and promote orderly and balanced economic development. Section 54 of the Bank of Mauritius Act 2004 provides for mandate of the MPC to formulate and determine the monetary policy to be conducted by the Bank in order to implement Section 5(2). Independence and Objectivity of the Monetary Policy Committee Independence, transparency and accountability are pillars of Central Bank governance that ensures that decisions are motivated by the objectives and mandate of the Bank. MPC members consist of the Governor, two Deputy Governors, five external members appointed by the Government. In case of a tie in voting, the Chairman of the MPC, the Governor, has the determining vote. MPC members have to adhere to a Code of Conduct and the Chairman of the MPC reports to the Bank of Mauritius Board on compliance to the Code by MPC members once a year. Macro-financial Building Blocks Clear separation between monetary and fiscal policy. Curtail fiscal dominance to contain uncertainties in monetary policy conduct. Ability to articulate the role of the exchange rate in the monetary strategy. Clear objectives and strategy for official intervention consistent with the monetary regime. 27 The Bank may grant advances to the Government to cover negative net cash flows at a rate to be agreed with the Government. The total amount of such advances outstanding is subject to a quantitative limit and repayment obligations as per Section 58 of the Bank of Mauritius Act 2004. The Bank's department responsible for the liquidity management is also responsible for the organization of government securities auctions. Decisions on the amount to put on tender and bids to accept are jointly made by the Bank and the Treasury. The yield that prevails reflects market rate. Exchange rate interventions in the market are limited to remove excess volatility and correct for any departure from fundamentals. The IMF classifies Mauritius exchange rate regime as "floating". Stable, sound and deep financial sector. Central Bank manages liquidity at aggregate level (allocation among banks via interbank market). The Mauritian banking system is well-capitalised and resilient against a range of shocks according to stress tests carried out by the Bank. Banks’ profitability and comfortable capitalisation provide valuable cushions against a range of shocks to their credit portfolios. Technical and Organizational Building Blocks The Central Bank ensures stable liquidity conditions in the money markets. The Bank of Mauritius issue Bank of Mauritius Bills/Notes and make use of other instruments like the Cash Reserve Ratio to manage liquidity. However, in recent years, chronic excess liquidity has lingered. A set of monetary policy instruments aligned with the level of money market development. Effective monetary operations allow the Central Bank to steer effectively money market rates in the short term. The Bank has used a broad range of monetary instruments to alleviate the build-up of excess liquidity, but have had limited success in bringing money market rates in line with the Key repo Rate (KRR). The persistence of excess liquidity has thus resulted into some disconnect between the monetary policy stance decided by the MPC and the actual monetary policy stance as reflected in money market conditions. The Bank is currently looking into various alternatives to remedy this problem. Adequate financial markets infrastructure (FMIs) Support the functioning of financial markets and monetary operations The Bank has developed a robust financial market infrastructure to support the functioning of financial markets and monetary operations. Adequate statistical data. Provide the Bank with the necessary data to support its analytical work, and macromodeling. Statistics Mauritius and the Bank have developed a comprehensive set of statistical data to support analytical work and macro-modeling. Tools to communicate effectively monetary policy. Help anchor inflation expectations through a transparent communication policy strategy. Much has been done to enhance communication of monetary policy in Mauritius: a MPC Statement is released after each MPC meeting to explain the gist of the decision on the monetary policy stance; The Governor holds a press conference to provide more information on the MPC decision and answer question of the press; the minutes of the MPC meeting are published with a two-week lag, disclosing the voting of each member of the committee; an inflation report detailing analytical work on inflation is published twice a year; The Governor highlights key points of monetary policy during the financial year in the Annual Report of the Bank. Proven Central Bank analytical capacities to support an understanding of the transmission channels. Ability to assess the role of money, interest rates, and the exchange rate. With the support of the IMF, the Bank has over the years upgraded its macro-modelling capacity. Effective liquidity forecasting framework. 28 Clear decision-making process and Central Bank organisation suited to support policy implementation. Ensure that monetary policy decisions are made according to a formal structure to ensure the effectiveness of the MPC decision. MPC Briefing papers are provided to MPC members along with presentations of key issues. The law also provide for other stakeholders, including the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development to make representation to the MPC to provide important information that may support the MPC decision making process. Section VI: Monetary policy framework and Inflation Expectations Notwithstanding several significant shocks to the global economy during the period 2007 to 2014, prudent fiscal policy and timely monetary policy seem to have well supported the economy. An important achievement of the current monetary policy framework in place has been the anchoring of inflation expectations, reduction in the variability of inflation and lower inflation rates. Prior to the establishment and work of the MPC, inflation expectation in the economy varied across different economic stakeholders. Chart 12: Inflation expectations and Actual inflation 7.0 6.0 Expected Inflation one year ahead Per cent 5.0 Actual Inflation during the survey month 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 Sep- Dec- Feb- May- Aug- Nov- Feb- May- Aug- Nov- Feb- May- Aug- Nov- Feb- May- Aug- Nov- Feb- May- Aug10 10 11 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 14 14 14 14 15 15 15 Survey Months With greater transparency, increased communication of monetary policy, commitment to fiscal discipline, and persistence of low global inflation post the global financial crisis, inflation expectations have been anchored at a lower range. Given the small open economy case of Mauritius, with Mauritius being a net food and energy importer – two items having much 29 weightage in the Consumer Price Index basket – global prices have considerable impact on the final outcomes of inflation as shown by the regression results in earlier sections. The most effective means by which monetary authorities are able to control domestic inflation in the short run are by anchoring inflation expectations and containing excessive growth of money supply. In the longer run, interest rate changes become more effective. Section VII: Has monetary policy accommodated fiscal Policy? To evaluate whether monetary policy has accommodated fiscal policy over the period under review, the first point considered is the extent to which domestic debt had been held by the Central Bank. The share of domestic budgetary debt held by the Central Bank peaked at 62.4% in 1981/82 at the onset of the macroeconomic crisis that Mauritius faced. The plot was pretty evident from what preceded the crisis: rising fiscal deficit with limited revenue collection for the treasury, growing government expenditure and eroding confidence in the policy framework in place. The increasing share of domestic budgetary debt held by the Central Bank implied that money supply must have increased and should have been inconsistent with the peg in place at that time. The only way out of the crisis that followed was to devalue the Mauritian rupee and, as mentioned earlier that was what was done. It all appears that in that era the central bank might have been under a regime of fiscal dominance. Chart 13: Domestic Budgetary Debt held by the Central Bank 30 Following the double devaluation of the domestic currency in the early 1980’s, fiscal consolidation and government debt held by the central bank was sharply reduced. In the late 1980’s and very early 1990’s, the share of domestic budgetary debt held by the Central Bank was almost nil with domestic private banks and pension funds holding over 80% of domestic budgetary debt. The occasional increases in central bank holding of government bonds were more the result of open market operations than for the purpose of financing the deficit since the market grew confident in the ability to pay of the Government. Moreover, with the promulgation of the Bank of Mauritius Act 2004, advances to Government have been subject to a quantitative limit of 10% of government revenue. Even if central bank financing is excluded, fiscal dominance could still be practiced if the exchange rate or policy rate were pushed in a direction to satisfy the needs of the fiscal stance. Although the regression results are inconclusive on the effect of exchange rate on fiscal balance, the positive correlation coefficient of 0.66 between exchange rate (LMURUSD) and fiscal balance suggests that depreciation of the rupee have supported fiscal consolidation. Exchange control has been suspended in Mauritius since July 1994 and exchange rate interventions have been limited to remove excess volatility from the market and to keep it in line with macroeconomic fundamentals. Since the exchange rate is determined by the market, the likelihood of controlling the exchange rate for fiscal needs is limited. Nonetheless, in the small open economy of Mauritius, the Central Bank has significant influence on the exchange rate through its interventions and could have acted to meet fiscal needs at times. But, disentangling exchange rate interventions for macroeconomic balance from fiscal reasons are complex given the limited available tools and information set. The next point we investigate is whether the policy rate, more particularly the KRR had been reduced to cut down borrowing cost or in line with the mandate of the MPC. In this case, the regression results demonstrate quite clearly that the main concerns for adjustment in the KRR related to the inflation and growth outlook. Furthermore Chart 14 confirms the fact that when the inflation outlook was on the upside, the monetary stance was tightened by hikes in the KRR while when the inflation outlook was on the downside, the KRR was cut to support growth. The low inflation outcomes, anchored inflation expectation, loose monetary policy globally and heightened risk aversion prevailing worldwide amid vulnerable growth outlook have resulted in domestic money markets being very liquid. The bid-cover ratios have been high in recent years with Treasury Bills yields plummeting and reaching record lows as shown in Chart 15. Open market operations to reduce excess liquidity has had limited impact given the chronic nature of excess liquidity and its size, under current economic conditions and risk averse environment globally. It can thus be safely concluded that monetary policy has not tried to unconditionally help fiscal policy. 31 Chart 14: KRR, Headline Inflation and Money market rates Chart 15: Bid-cover and Money market rates 32 It is however true that in Mauritius, monetary and fiscal policies are coordinated, but they are for maintaining macroeconomic and financial equilibrium. The country has through various reforms improved fiscal management and has consistently tried to stay on a prudent fiscal path even in the midst of the global financial crisis whose spillover effects were partly contained by a stimulus package and timely loose monetary policies. Fortunately for Mauritius, the fiscal reforms were initiated and implemented prior to the onset of the global financial crisis. Section VIII: Putting all the pieces together and Policy Recommendations All estimation results indicate that fiscal policy in Mauritius has significant impact on inflation and other macroeconomic variables. Without proper fiscal management, governments lack fiscal space to counter the adverse effects of economic shocks and tend to move from one bad equilibrium to another. Unsustainable fiscal path ultimately leads to economic crises. Mauritius has been able to weather the global financial crisis relatively well, principally due to its fiscal reforms in 2006-07. Fiscal outcomes have important implications for sovereign ratings and risk premium and in turn for borrowing cost and inflation in an economy. The Government is a major player in small open economy Mauritius such that economic activities get a boost through multiplier effects of government expenditure and induced business optimism by Government actions. Fiscal discipline has been enshrined in the law of the country with the Public Debt Management Act 2008. Fiscal discipline is reinforced with Central Bank independence. The promulgation of Bank of Mauritius Act 2004 set the stage for the move towards central bank independence and the study demonstrates that the institutional changes brought about have succeeded in building credibility of the overall policy framework and considerable payoffs have been obtained in terms of anchored inflation expectations, low inflation rate and inflation volatility. It is noteworthy, however, that independence of the Central Bank would not have been effective without a well-functioning coordination between fiscal and monetary authorities. In the absence of fiscal discipline, for instance, the outcome could have been much different. Fiscal policy has been prudent. In spite of the stimulus package offered after the adverse shock of the global financial crisis started impacting on the performance of the Mauritian economy, fiscal deficit has remained on a prudent path, thus, supporting the conduct of monetary policy. Major fiscal reforms were undertaken in 2006-07 that have led to improved revenue collection. Additionally, low interest rates on public debt have contained government expenditure growth to a large extent. The excess liquidity that has prevailed in recent years suggest that crowding out has been absent. In effect, there is evidence of government spending being supportive of private investment through multiplier effects on aggregate demand and business optimism. In recent years, external debt financing has increased noticeably as a result of the low borrowing cost conditions that prevailed. However, the increased budget central government external debt could have been an important source of excess liquidity in the economy. To paraphrase Sargent 33 and Wallace (1981), the monetary authorities might be subject to some “unpleasant monetarist arithmetic”. The fiscal authorities in their quest to ensure fiscal discipline, have to remain in line with the target of keeping government debt as a percentage of GDP around 50% by 2018 and cannot have huge fiscal deficits. So the need for public debt financing is limited to repayment of existing debts and potentially an annual deficit of 3% of GDP. GDP growth has been less than 4% annually, demand for private sector credit has been slowing down and private investments even contracting. The end result is that new government debt issues are unable to absorb the excess liquidity in the market. The issue of monetary authority debt securities can only provide short term temporary solutions, and might in effect add to the excess liquidity after some lags with initial excess liquidity absorbed returning into the market along with the added interest payments. In face of such a situation, increasing share of foreign borrowing can only complicate the matter with less supply of government bonds to the market and added liquidity from external sources. Additional government debt could have been used to generate new growth in the economy, which could have in turn partly absorbed new supplies of liquidity. But, issue of Bank of Mauritius bills only tend to defer the problem of excess liquidity to a later date if growth does not pick-up adequately in the intervening time. In face of low GDP growth, the chronic excess liquidity is unlikely to be resolved. The first recommendation is about the issue of Bank of Mauritius bills, which is proposed to be kept for short-term management of excess liquidity since it cannot address the problems of chronic excess liquidity. The second recommendation is to consider an exchange of part of the foreign debt for domestic debt to resolve partially the problem of chronic excess liquidity. This would also shield the economy from exchange rate risks. The third policy recommendation is about controlling inflation through changes in interest rates. It has been shown that in the long run, interest rate is an appropriate monetary instrument for controlling inflation while control in money supply is effective only in the very short run. Persistence in tightening of money supply growth could over time be counterproductive, in line with Sargent and Wallace (1981) postulate. Further, it was observed that exogenous shocks like food and oil price shocks weigh on price developments and therefore have important implications for the transmission mechanism of monetary policy. The regression results also confirm the considerable impact of exchange rate developments on inflation. It is recommended that all these considerations be included in the decision-making process to enhance the effectiveness of monetary policy. 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