An Assessment of Monetary Policy Transmission in Kenya
Abstract
The role played by monetary policy towards sustainable economic outcomes cannot be refuted.
Kenyan government through Central bank implements various monetary policies to foster stability
in the macroeconomic environment and hence, economic growth and development. Even though
previous studies argue that monetary policy influence price and output in the economy through
various channels, there is dearth of these evidence in the Kenyan context. Therefore, this study
investigates the influence of monetary policy on real economy. Specifically, the study evaluates
credit, exchange rate and asset price mechanisms on prices and real economic growth. In addition,
the study determines the most effective transmission channel in Kenya and finally, to tests for
granger causality between monetary policy transmission channels, inflation and output. Data from
1990 to 2020 on quarterly basis was obtained from the Central Bank of Kenya Database. The study
implemented Vector Autoregressive approach upon which the impulse response functions
computed to help in explaining how economic growth and prices responds to shocks in the
monetary policy instruments. In addition, granger causality test was conducted to examine the
causality relationship between monetary policy instruments and output variables. The study
established that both asset price and M1 money growth channels of monetary transmission had
mixed results. It was also found that both credit and exchange rate were very effective monetary
policy transmission mechanisms with respect to both GDP per capita and consumer price index in
Kenya. Furthermore, credit channel is more effective pass-through mechanism to both GDP per
capita and CPI. It was recommended that monetary authorities should maintain the base lending
rates and also strengthen exchange rates for stability in other macroeconomics.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- School of Economics [248]
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