Emerging Market Resilience: Good Luck or Good Policies?
Marijn Bolhuis,
Francesco Grigoli,
Marcin Kolasa,
Roland Meeks,
Andrea Presbitero and
Zhao Zhang
No 2025/256, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
Emerging markets have shown remarkable resilience during risk-off episodes in recent years. While favorable external conditions—good luck—contributed to this resilience, improvements in policy frameworks—good policies—played a critical role in bolstering the capacity of emerging markets to withstand the adverse consequences of these events. Improvements in monetary policy implementation and credibility have reduced reliance on foreign exchange (FX) interventions and capital flow management measures, and stricter macroprudential regulation also contributed to less FX interventions. Also, central banks have become less sensitive to fiscal interference and hold sway over domestic borrowing conditions. Looking ahead, countries with robust frameworks face easier policy trade-offs and are better positioned to navigate risk-off episodes. In contrast, economies with weaker frameworks risk de-anchoring inflation expectations and larger output losses if monetary tightening is delayed, especially when persistent price pressures emerge. In these settings, FX interventions offer only temporary relief and are less necessary when policy frameworks are sound.
Keywords: Emerging markets; Risk-off shocks; Monetary policy; FX interventions; IMF working papers; emerging market resilience; FX intervention; views of the IMF; inflation expectation; Inflation; Exchange rates; Global financial crisis of 2008-2009; Emerging and frontier financial markets; Global (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 47
Date: 2025-12-05
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cba, nep-ifn and nep-mon
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