Adopting Inflation Targeting: Practical Issues for Emerging Market Countries

The inflation targeting economies are large, relatively well developed, and have more developed domestic financial systems compared to their counterparts.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2000 Issue 017
Publication date: December 2000
ISBN: 9781557759917
$15.00
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Topics covered in this book

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Banks and Banking , Finance , Inflation , Money and Monetary Policy , OP , central bank , inflation targeting framework , emerging market country , country , inflation targeting country , practice inflation targeting , inflation targeting help , Inflation targeting , Inflation , Emerging and frontier financial markets , Exchange rates , Crawling peg , Africa

Summary

This report on Adopting Inflation Targeting describes the trade-offs raised in the formulation of an inflation targeting framework and states the approaches to these trade-offs used by inflation targeting countries. The inherent differences discussed in this report between the six emerging market inflation targeting countries—Brazil, Chile, the Czech Republic, Israel, Poland, and South Africa—and other emerging market countries may shed some light on the preferred starting point and conditions for inflation targeting. Most central banks in emerging market countries have taken important organizational steps to enhance their capacity to apply greater judgment and foster transparency and accountability. These steps can be particularly challenging for emerging market central banks that have traditionally operated with controls and regulations and have been reluctant to communicate their policy intentions and economic outlooks. During the transition to full-fledged inflation targeting, several emerging market countries have confronted the challenge of dis-inflating to the long-run inflation objective.