Abstract

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka has increasingly been relying on interest rates as the instrument for conducting monetary policy. Changes to the key monetary policy variables, the Repo and the Reverse Repo rates, are initially expected to be reflected in the OMO rates and the call money market rates, before being passedthrough to commercial bank retail interest rates. It is important to obtain a good understanding of the speed and magnitude of the interest rate pass-through to make timely monetary policy decisions in order to meet the objective of economic and price stability. This paper examines the size and speed of the pass-through from policy interest rates to call money market rates and from call money market rates to commercial bank retail interest rates. The paper concludes that the CBSL policy decisions are efficiently transmitted to the short end of the money market within a matter of days. Also, the pass-through from policy interest rates to the call money market rate is almost complete. However, the pass-through from call money market rates to both lending rates and deposit interest rates of commercial banks is sluggish and incomplete. The only exception is, perhaps, the rates on lending to prime customers, which show a faster and a fuller pass-through. Also, there is no evidence of an asymmetry of pass-through over different phases of the interest rate cycle. (JEL E43, E52) DOI: 10.4038/ss.v35i1.1232 <em>Staff Studies </em>Volume 35 Numbers 1& 2 2005 p.1-32

Highlights

  • During the Past few decades, interest rate has become the most important policy instrument used by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) in its monetary operations

  • The aim of the present study is to address three issues relating to the interest rate passthrough process in Sri Lanka

  • The data described in the previous chanper are used to carry out the analysis of the interest rate pass-through process in Sri Lanka by employing the statistical and econometric methods explained earlier

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Summary

Introduction

During the Past few decades, interest rate has become the most important policy instrument used by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) in its monetary operations. The CBSL has gradually moved away from non-market oriented policy instruments to the use of policy interest rates as a market oriented framework in the conduct of the country’s monetary policy. This has been an evolutionary process where the CBSL introduced the Repurchase (Repo) facility in October 1993, Reverse Repurchase (Reverse Repo) facility in November 1998 and more active open market operations (OMO) in March 2003. The views expressed in this paper are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka

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