Abstract

The study empirically assesses how macroprudential policy interacts with systemic risk, industrial production, and monetary intervention on a global level from January 2006 to December 2018. We adopt the aggregate proxies of these variables, capturing their global effects, and use a novel econometric technique, namely, smooth local projections. The study finds that global macroprudential policy leads the monetary policy, exhibiting a countercyclical pattern concerning industrial production. The latter has an inverse bidirectional linkage with systemic risk. Thus, an ex-ante tight macroprudential policy can indirectly mitigate global systemic risk through its pro-growth effect on industrial production, although no convincing evidence exists for the direct impact of a macroprudential intervention on systemic risk. The study results endure several extensions and a robustness check, which builds on alternative measures of global systemic stress and real economic activity, thereby legitimizing the increased importance attached to the macroprudential policy since the 2007–2009 global financial crisis.

Highlights

  • Since the 2007–2009 global financial crisis (GFC), macroprudential policy has been recognized as a tool to mitigate the buildup of systemic risk and severity of financial crises

  • Such relative superiority of macroprudential policy can arise from the low-interest-rate environment, which entrenched after the GFC and substantially narrowed the scope of monetary policy

  • Results of the extensions Decomposing SRISK into low and high regimes does not alter the major baseline conclusion regarding the pivotal role of global macroprudential policy for the monetary policy

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 2007–2009 global financial crisis (GFC), macroprudential policy has been recognized as a tool to mitigate the buildup of systemic risk and severity of financial crises. This study examines how macroprudential and monetary policies interact with systemic risk, industrial production, and with each other on the global level from January 2006 to December 2018. When applying this econometric technique, we depart from the premise that along with SRISK and industrial production index, the proxies of global macroprudential and monetary policies are endogenous variables.

Results
Conclusion
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