Effects of the BCEAO post-COVID-19 strategy on economic activities in Togo

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18559/rielf.2021.2.9

Keywords:

COVID-19, monetary policy, economy recovery, informality, BCEAO, DSGE

Abstract

The consequences of the anti-COVID-19 barrier measures have been damaging to economic activity. In order to stimulate economic recovery, BCEAO is proposing a 20% reduction in its target rate (2.5% to 2%). Our study offers a pre-assessment of the effects of this monetary policy on economic aggregates in Togo. Using a DSGE model based on the restrictions of the informal sector on access to credit, we analyze the transmission channels of the cut in the BCEAO target rate to the economy. The 20% reduction in the target rate generates a drop in the lending rate for commercial banks about nearly 3%, which stimulates investment for an additional 2% effect on GDP growth. However, growth will be mainly drained by the formal sector, the main beneficiary of the additional credit. The informal sector will even be negatively affected, assuming the substitutability of factors between sectors of activity. There is a 0.9% drop in informal employment and a 0.7% reduction in informal production. The BCEAO's recovery strategy could allow the West African countries to initiate a structural change for a better development different from the strong informal propensity one.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Ahmed, W. (2012). Pakistan economy DSGE model with informality: The empirics of cali- bration. (MPRA Paper, University Library of Munich).
View in Google Scholar

Ameganvi, K. (2018). Les déterminants de la demande de refinancement des banques auprès de la banque centrale. (Document d’étude et recherche No. 15/02).
View in Google Scholar

Asongu, S. (2014, January). Are proposed African monetary unions optimal currency areas? Real, monetary and fiscal policy convergence analysis. African Journal of Economic and Management Studies.
View in Google Scholar

Bandaogo, M. S. (2016). Fiscal and monetary policy in the presence of informality and the incentive to join a currency union. Seattle: Northeastern University.
View in Google Scholar

Bernanke, B., & Blinder, A. (1992, September). The federal funds rate and the channels of monetary transmission. American Economic Review.
View in Google Scholar

Bernanke, B. & Gertler, M. (1995). Inside the black box: The credit channel of monetary policy transmission. Journal of Economic Perspective, 9, 27–48.
View in Google Scholar

Bernanke, B., Gertler, M., & Gilchrist, S. (1994). The financial accelerator and the flight to quality. (NBER Working Paper 4789).
View in Google Scholar

Bhattarai, S., & Neely, J. (2016). An analysis of the literature on international Unconventional Monetary Policy. (FRB St. Louis Working Paper No. 2016–21).
View in Google Scholar

Boissieu, Ch. (2002). Les mécanismes de transmission de la politique monétaire dans une union économique et monétaire. (Symposium du quarantième anniversaire de la BCEAO, 43–52).
View in Google Scholar

Brooks, S. P., & Gelman, A. (1998). General methods for monitoring convergence of iterative simulations. Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics, 7, 434‒455.
View in Google Scholar

Ca’ Zorzi, M., Dedola, L., Georgiadis, G., Jarociński, M., Stracca, L., & Strasser, G. (2020). Monetary policy and its transmission in a globalised world. (ECB Working Paper No. 20202407).
View in Google Scholar

Calvo, G. A. (1983). Staggered prices in a utility-maximizing framework. Journal of Mone- tary Economics, 12(3), 383–398.
View in Google Scholar

Cecchetti, S. G. (1995, May/June). Distinguishing theories of the monetary transmission mechanism. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, 77, 83–97.
View in Google Scholar

Chandavarkar, A. G. (1971, March). Some aspects of interest rate policies in less developed economies: The experience of selected Asian countries. (IMF Staff Papers, 18(1), 48–112).
View in Google Scholar

Cushman, D. O., & Zha, T. (1995). Identifying monetary policy in a small open economy under flexible exchange rates. (Working Paper No. 95–97). Atlanta: Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.
View in Google Scholar

Dembo Toé, M., & Hounpkatin, M. (2007). Lien entre la masse monétaire et l’inflation dans l’UEMOA. Dakar: BCEAO.
View in Google Scholar

Diagne, A., & Doucouré, F. B. (2001). Les canaux de transmission de la politique monétaire dans les pays de l’UEMOA. (Working Paper Consortium pour la recherche économique et sociale (CRES), Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar).
View in Google Scholar

Doe, L., & Diallo, M. L. (1997, December). Déterminants empiriques de l’inflation dans les pays de L’UEMOA. Notes d’Information et Statistiques, (476).
View in Google Scholar

Doe, L., & Diarrisso, S. (1998, April, May, June). De l’origine monétaire de l’inflation dans les pays de l’UEMOA. Notes d’Information et Statistiques, (480/481/482).
View in Google Scholar

Dornbusch, R. (1976). Expectations and exchange rate dynamics. Journal of Political Eco- nomy, 84(6), 1161–1176.
View in Google Scholar

Dowd, K. (2020, fall). The deficit myth: Modern monetary theory and the birth of the people’s economy. Cato Journal.
View in Google Scholar

Friedman, M. (1968, March). The role of monetary policy. American Economic Review, 58(1), 1‒17.
View in Google Scholar

Gali, J. (2008). Monetary policy, inflation, and the business cycle. An introduction to the new Keynesian framework and its monetary policy applications. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
View in Google Scholar

Gali, J., & Monacelli, T. (2005). Monetary policy and exchange rate volatility in a small open economy. The Review of Economic Studies, 72(3), 707–734.
View in Google Scholar

Gilchrist, S., & Saito, M. (2006). Expectations, asset prices, and monetary policy: The role of learning. (NBER Working Paper No. 12442).
View in Google Scholar

Gonzàlez, A., Terasvirta, T., & Van Dijk, D. (2005). Panel smooth transition regression models. (Working Papers No. 604). Stockholm School of Economics. Government Finance Statistics.
View in Google Scholar

Goodhart, C., & Jensen, M. (2015). Currency school versus banking school: An ongoing confrontation. Economic Thought, 4(2), 20‒23.
View in Google Scholar

Grilli, V., & Roubini, N. (1995). Liquidity models in open economies: Theory and empirical evidence. (Working Papers No. 96-16). New York University, Leonard N. Stern School of Business.
View in Google Scholar

Han, X., & Wei, S.-J. (2018). International transmissions of monetary shocks: Between a trilemma and a dilemma. Journal of International Economics, 110, 205‒219.
View in Google Scholar

INSEED. (2015). Enquête QUIBB: élaboration du profil de la pauvreté au Togo. Lome: Institut National de la Statistique et des Études Economiques et Démographiques.
View in Google Scholar

Jarociński, M., & Peter, K. (2020). Deconstructing monetary policy surprises—the role of information shocks. American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 12(2), 1‒43.
View in Google Scholar

Kashyap, A. K., Stein, J. C., & Wilcox, D. W. (1993). Monetary policy and credit conditions: Evidence from the composition of external finance. American Economic Review, 83(1), 78.
View in Google Scholar

Kronborg, A. (2016). Forecasting using a DSGE model with a fixed exchange rate. Methods and Applications to DSGE Models. Copenhagen: Institut for Økonomi, Aarhus Universitet.
View in Google Scholar

Lahcen, M. (2014). DSGE models for developing economies: An application to Morocco. (MPRA Paper No. 63404). Lausanne: University of Lausanne.
View in Google Scholar

Mankiw, N. G. (2020). A skeptic’s guide to modern monetary theory. (NBER Working Paper No. 26650).
View in Google Scholar

McKinnon, R. I. (1973). Money and capital in economic development. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution.
View in Google Scholar

Milani, F., & Treadwell, J. (2012). Effect of monetary policy “news” and “surprises”. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 44(8), 1667‒1692.
View in Google Scholar

Miranda-Agrippino, S., Nenova, T., & Rey, H. (2020). Global footprints of monetary policy. (Discussion Papers 2004, Centre for Macroeconomics).
View in Google Scholar

Miranda-Agrippino, S., & Rey, H. (2020, November). U.S. monetary policy and the global financial cycle. The Review of Economic Studies, 87(6), 2754–2776.
View in Google Scholar

Mishra, P., Spilimbergo, A., & Montiel, P. (2012). Monetary transmission in low-income countries: Effectiveness and policy implications. (IMF Working Papers No. 223).
View in Google Scholar

Mitchell, W., Randall Wray, L., & Watts, M. (2019). Macroeconomics. London: Red Globe Press.
View in Google Scholar

Mundell, R. (1962, March). The appropriate use of monetary and fiscal policy for internal and external stability. (Staff Papers No. 9, 70‒76).
View in Google Scholar

Murphy, R. (2020). Book review. The deficit of myth: Modern monetary theory and the birth of the people’s economy, Stephanie Kelton. Quarterly Journal of Austrian Econo- mics, 23(2), 232‒251.
View in Google Scholar

Newman, P. (2020). Modern monetary theory: An Austrian interpretation of recrudescent Keynesianism. Atlantic Economic Journal, 48, 23–31.
View in Google Scholar

Nubukpo, K. K. (2002). L’impact de la variation des taux d’intérêt directeurs de la BCEAO sur l’inflation et la croissance dans l’UMOA. Notes d’Information et Statistiques de la BCEAO, 526.
View in Google Scholar

Ogunjimi, S.O. (1997). Public finance for polytechnics ICAN students. Bida: Lekem Pro- ductions.
View in Google Scholar

Palley, T. (2015). The critics of modern monetary theory (MMT) are right. Review of Poli- tical Economy, 27(1), 45–61.
View in Google Scholar

Robinson, J. (1965). Kalecki and Keynes. In J. Robinson (Ed.), Collected Economic Papers (vol. 3, pp. 92‒99). Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
View in Google Scholar

Sall, A. K. (2020, June 27). Quel objectif d’inflation pour l’Union Monétaire Ouest Africaine (UMOA). Revue Économique et Monétaire.
View in Google Scholar

Samake, I. (2010). A macro model of the credit channel in currency union member: The case of Benin. (IMF Working Paper No. 191).
View in Google Scholar

Skousen, M. (2020). There’s much ruin in a nation: An analysis of modern monetary theory. Atlantic Economic Journal, 48, 11‒21.
View in Google Scholar

Stiglitz, J. E., & Weiss, A. (1981). Credit rationing in markets with imperfect information. The American Economic Review, 71(3), 93‒410.
View in Google Scholar

Summers, L. H. (2020). Recette pour un désastre. La gauche et la théorie monétaire moderne. Commentaire, 71(3), 672‒674.
View in Google Scholar

Tahavieva, F. R., & Nigmatullina, I. A. (2017). Speech-communicative function in the structure of predictive competence of young schoolchildren with musculoskeletal disorders. Astra Salvensis, Supplement, 10, 315‒322.
View in Google Scholar

Tanzi, V. (1978). Inflation, real tax revenue, and the case for inflationary finance: Theory with an application to Argentina. (IMF Staff Papers No. 25, 417‒451).
View in Google Scholar

Walsh, C. A. (2003). Accountability, transparency, and inflation targeting. Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 35(5), 829‒849.
View in Google Scholar

Downloads

Published

2021-12-30

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Aguey, S., Ali, Y., & Agbodji, A. E. (2021). Effects of the BCEAO post-COVID-19 strategy on economic activities in Togo. La Revue Internationale Des Économistes De Langue Française, 6(2), 183-215. https://doi.org/10.18559/rielf.2021.2.9