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학술저널

Endogenous Selection of Monetary Institutions

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Institutional or regulatory selection can often be endogenous in that the selection is made by state authorities mainly to serve their own interests. We apply this law-and-economics proposition to representative monetary institutions: open market operation versus discount windows. Both instruments have dominantly been treated as "indifferent" either in traditional macroeconomic theory or in existing central banking laws. Nonetheless, we observe fairly differing degrees of the relative reliance on discount windows across 71 countries. This paper is a first-time attempt to empirically explain these country-specific differences by means of our multi-dimensional proxies of the bureaucratic discretionary power. It confirms that the monetary authority's discretionary power per se, rather than the conventional factors such as economic development or the central bank's independence, plays a far more important role in explaining the relative reliance on discount windows.

Ⅰ. Introduction: Indifference among Monetary Institutions?

Ⅱ. Systematic Differences in the Reliance on Discount Windows?

Ⅲ. Peculiarities and Incentives Underlying the Discount Windows

Ⅳ. Determinants of the Reliance on Discount Windows

Ⅴ. Estimation Results

Ⅵ. Conclusions and Future Research

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