Back to Results
First PageMeta Content
Monetary inflation / Deflation / World food price crisis / Price / Late-2000s financial crisis / Commodity / Macroeconomics / Futures contract / Inflation in India / Economics / Inflation / Monetary policy


Has Asian emerging market monetary policy been too pro-cyclical when responding to swings in commodity prices?
Add to Reading List

Document Date: 2013-09-17 09:53:00


Open Document

File Size: 247,55 KB

Share Result on Facebook

City

Taipei / Beijing / /

Company

Lehman / Marco Lombardi Bank / HP / /

Continent

America / Asia / Europe / /

Country

Switzerland / Hungary / Mexico / Sweden / South Africa / New Zealand / Poland / Norway / Thailand / Indonesia / Turkey / Malaysia / Japan / United States / Brazil / Canada / Australia / Slovakia / Korea / United Kingdom / Philippines / China / Singapore / India / Denmark / Czech Republic / /

Currency

cent / /

Event

Natural Disaster / /

IndustryTerm

energy price shocks / food prices / oil shale development / energy prices / oil price experience / commodityintensive products / food / energy / oil crisis / oil supply shocks / food price shocks / oil price shocks / bank / banking / exogenous oil supplydriven price increases / monetary policy tools / share food / theoretical models featuring energy prices / /

Organization

International Monetary Fund / European Central Bank / Bank of Japan / Swiss National Bank / What / Reserve Bank of Australia / OECD / G20 / US Federal Reserve / Deutsche Bundesbank / Bank of Thailand / /

Person

Claudio Borio / Andrew Filardo / Bruno / Shin / Prasad / Anand / Lombardi Robays / Van Robays / /

Position

targeting producer / driver of global commodity price swings / /

Region

East Asia / Central Europe / eastern Europe / /

SocialTag