Monetary approach to balance of payments : a case of Fiji
Abstract
Economists and policymakers have been increasingly preoccupied with
the problems of inflation and balance of payments disequilibria since
the early 1950s. Their preoccupation has led to new approaches to
monetary analysis. In this period, a gradual evolution of a third major
approach called the monetary approach to the balance of payments took
place; the two best-known earlier approaches are the elasticity
(neoclassical) approach and the income absorption (neo -Keynesian)
approach.
Each of the three approaches, as often pointed out could in
principle produce the right answers if it were correctly applied.
However, for applied research and background work for policy discussion
on balance of payments problems. the monetary approach suggests itself
as simpler and more manageable than the other approaches. It is based on
the postulates of a stable demand function for money and of a stable
process through which the money supply is generated. By focussing
directly on the relevant monetary aggregates, this approach eliminates
the intractable problems associated with the estimation of numerous
elasticities of international transactions and of the parameters
describing their interdependence, which are inherent in other
approaches. This study therefore is concerned with testing the relevance of the
monetary approach to the balance of payments problems in Fiji. It
involves finding a stable demand for money function and then using it to
estimate the desired demand for money in Fiji for the period of the
study (1961 - 1984) . The analysis system developed, uses changes in
desired demand for money and changes in domestic credit. If an increase
ill desired demand for money is greater than an increase in domestic
credit . then it is expected that there would be a positive change in international reserves, and if, on the other hand, changes in domestic
credit is greater than changes in desired demand for money then a
negative change in international reserves would be expected.
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