Modern Monetary Theory or Islamic Monetary Theory of Value? Evidence from Malaysia'
Adam Abdullah
·Journal of King Abdulaziz University: Islamic Economics ·2020 ·JEL: E12, E31, E42, E52
The purpose of this study is to contrast two recent monetary reform proposals involving the neo-chartalist Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) and the metallist Islamic Monetary Theory of Value (IMTV). Money is the common denominator for all economic transactions and yet, under the fiat standard, we have witnessed an exponential increase in prices and 425 instances of monetary, debt, and financial crises. Therefore, genuine monetary reform must protect the store of value function of money over the long term to protect wealth from confiscation by inflation thereby ensuring monetary and economic stability. This study adopts an MMT sectoral balance analysis of Malaysian macroeconomic data, as well as an IMTV analysis of Malaysian macroeconomic and gold price data to evaluate the effect on nominal and real prices. It finds that MMT provides no new insights about monetary theory, while making unsubstantiated claims about macroeconomic policy that would merely extend the highly inflationary monetary policies experienced under a centralized debt-based monetary system. Conversely, this study empirically establishes that a de-centralized monetary system based on the IMTV and the intrinsic value of pure gold (or silver), maintains its p
The Impacts of Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Economic Growth in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand
Chai-Thing Tan
· Azali Mohamed
· Muzafar Shah Habibullah
· Lee Chin
·South Asian Journal of Macroeconomics and Public Finance ·2020 ·JEL: E52, E58, E62, C01
This article analyses the impact of monetary and fiscal policies on economic growth in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand from 1980:Q1 to 2017:Q1. Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) approach is employed to determine the long-run relationship. Further, a range of econometric models, such as fully modified least squares method (FMOLS), canonical cointegration regression (CCR) and dynamic ordinary least squares method (DOLS), are applied to check the robustness. The results are stable and robust as all the models yield consistency result. The main findings in this study demonstrate that: (a) interest rate had a negative impact on economic growth in three selected countries.
Capital flows liberalisation and macroprudential policies: The effects on credit cycles in emerging economies
Tanja Kuzman
· Jelisaveta Lazarevic
· Milan Nedeljkovic
·Economic Analysis and Policy ·2022
This paper studies the conditionality in the relationship between capital flows liberalisation, macroprudential policies, and credit cycles in emerging market (EM) economies. Using quarterly data for 16 EM economies, we document the effectiveness of broad macroprudential measures in containing credit cycles in the EM economies. More importantly and in line with theory, we find that the effect of liberalisation of capital inflows on the excessive credit dynamics is conditional on the stance of the macroprudential regulation. When the macroprudential framework is tight, the liberalisation of capital inflows does not have a statistically significant effect on the excessive credit dynamics. In contrast, in economies with a lax macroprudential framework, the liberalisation of capital inflows may amplify credit expansion. The results provide a rationale to explain often conflicting findings in the earlier empirical literature.
COVID-19 and regional solutions for mitigating the risk of SME finance in selected ASEAN member states☆
Farhad Taghizadeh-Hesary
· Han-Phoumin
· Ehsan Rasoulinezhad
·Economic Analysis and Policy ·2022 ·JEL: H81, G21
The main objective of this paper is to identify the determining factors of the optimal credit guarantee ratio in four members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), namely Indonesia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Malaysia, by employing statistical techniques and the Vector Autoregressive (VAR) approach. The empirical findings prove that the loan default ratio is the optimal credit guarantee ratio’s main determining factor. The empirical findings confirm that the credit guarantee ratio needs to be increased in the ASEAN region to help SMEs survive in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and for the post-COVID-19 economic recovery. The results show that the credit guarantee ratio should vary for different countries based on the macroeconomic climate and for each bank or, in other words, for groups of banks with similar financial soundness. The practical policy recommendations are establishing a regional credit guarantee scheme (RCGS) and evaluating banks’ soundness for setting the optimal credit guarantee ratio.
Influence of economic factors on disaggregated Islamic banking deposits: Evidence with structural breaks in Malaysia
Sakiru Adebola Solarin
· Shawkat Hammoudeh
· Muhammad Shahbaz
·Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money ·2018 ·JEL: C58; E42; E43; G01; G21
This paper contributes to the existing empirical literature on savings and Islamic banking systems by comprehensively examining the determinants of Islamic banking deposits in Malaysia. Initially, we examine the factors affecting the deposits in Islamic banking by types, which include investment deposits, demand deposits, savings deposits, ringgit Tawarruq deposits, dollar Tawarruq deposits and negotiable instrument deposits. Additionally, we investigate the determinants of deposits in Islamic banking by holders including household deposits, business deposits, financial institution deposits, federal government deposits, state government deposits and statutory agency deposits. We also examine the factors affecting the total deposits in the Islamic banking system. After confirming that the variables are stationary in the first difference through the use of the residual augmented least squares (RALS) procedure of Meng et al. (2014), we use the break-augmented cointegration methods of Johansen et al. (2000) and Giles and Godwin (2012) to check the cointegrating relationships and generate the long run coefficients of the variables. The results show that industrial production index, real interest rates on fixed and savings deposits have positive impacts on several components of Islamic banking deposits and the total deposits of Islamic banks, while real interest rates on deposits in commercial banks have a negative impact. However, the roles of both the Shariah index and the real exchange rate are mixed.
Effect of Macroprudential Policies on Sovereign Bond Markets: Evidence from the ASEAN-4 Countries
Joshua Aizenman
· Gazi Salah. Uddin
· Tianqi Luo
· Ranadeva Jayasekera
· Donghyun Park
·NBER Working Paper Series ·2022 ·JEL: E52,E58,F42
This paper examines whether prudential policies help to reduce sovereign bond vulnerability to global spillover risk in ASEAN-4 countries (Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand). We measure sovereign vulnerability within a risk connectedness network among sovereign bonds. The direct effect is that markets with tighter prudential policies have significantly smaller spillovers from the Treasury yield shocks of other regional and global economies. The sum of indirect and direct effects indicates that prudential policies reduce sovereign spillover risk in the long term. These findings suggest prudential policies have dual efficiency in sovereign risk regulation and Treasury internationalization.
Movement Control Order Policy to Prevent the Spread of COVID-19 and Its Impact on Quarterly Growth and Its Components in Malaysia: A Synthetic Control Method for Policy Evaluation
Basem Ertim
· Tamat Sarmidi
· Norlin Khalid
· Mohd Helmi Ali
·Asian Economics Letters ·2022
In an attempt to mitigate the effects of COVID-19, the Malaysian government imposed the Movement Control Order (MCO). To address the adverse impacts of the MCO policy, the Malaysian government initiated a series of recovery plans for both fiscal and monetary measures. This study aims to assess the government’s various policy measures on Malaysia’s leading macroeconomic indicators. Regardless of the differences in the gross domestic product (GDP) components, the real impacts on GDP growth are almost identical between Malaysia and a control group. This result is partly explained by the increase in total and domestic investment and private consumption.
International reserves and trilemma policy convergence in Malaysia
Chee-Hong Law
·Applied Economics Letters ·2018 ·JEL: F21; F31; F40
Some observations have suggested that international reserves contribute to trilemma policy convergence in emerging countries. Nonetheless, this hypothesis needs more solid empirical evidence to determine its validity. This article tests this hypothesis by examining the relationships among the index of policy dispersion, international reserves and trade openness in a threshold model in Malaysia. As a small open economy, Malaysia has accumulated a relatively large amount of international reserves since the mid-1990s. The results indicate that the positive impact of international reserves on reducing policy dispersion or achieving policy convergence is found only if the international reserves are above a threshold. Hence, this conclusion supports the need to hold a relatively high level of international reserves in Malaysia.
Evaluation of monetary policy: Evidence of the role of money from Malaysia
Abdelkader O.El Alaoui
· Hashim Bin Jusoh
· Sheila Ainon Yussof
· Mohamed Hisham Hanifa
·Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance ·2019
This paper, for the best of our knowledge, is the first attempt to assess the role of money in the Malaysian economy using wavelet techniques. To do so, a macroeconomic model-based policy rules has been formulated. In relation with the recurring financial crises, we analyse the relationship between the quantity of money, interest rate, inflation, exchange rate, index of industrial production and equity indices, in the case of Malaysia. In this analysis, UK economy aggregates are taken as benchmark. Therefore, the relationships between monetary policy variables and macroeconomic variables are evolving with time and have non-homogeneous trends across different time scales. Some strong correlations have been found in regard to Malaysian Monetary Policy using, major monetary aggregates; the quantity of Money, the interest rate and the exchange rate inducing some lead-lag interactions between those key variables. In addition, we analyse the effect of LIBOR on Malaysian interest rate (KLIBOR). We found that the KLIBOR is lagging behind the LIBOR in most of the time. In the end, some lessons will be drawn for the monetary policy in Malaysia, in terms of the high impact of the role of money and the expected implications regarding an effective Islamic monetary policy.
Financial Vulnerability and Economic Dynamics in Malaysia
Tai-Hock Kuek
· Chin-Hong Puah
· M. Affendy Arip
·Journal of Central Banking Theory and Practice ·2020 ·JEL: C11, C32, C58, E44, G01
This study attempts to develop a financial vulnerability indicator serving as a composite indicator for the state of financial vulnerability. The indicator was constructed from 10 variables of macroeconomic, financial and property market by extracting a common vulnerability component through the dynamic approximate factor model. On the feedback and amplification effects, the outcome revealed that financial vulnerability shock catalysed significant negative effects on economic activity in a high-vulnerability regime, while the impact was negligible in periods of low vulnerability. This study highlighted the usefulness of composite indicators as an early warning mechanism to gauge vulnerabilities in the Malaysian financial system.