2017
DOI: 10.18235/0000681
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Credit Supply in Venezuela: A Non-Conventional Bank Lending Channel?

Abstract: work is licensed under a Creative Commons IGO 3.0 AttributionNonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC-IGO BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ legalcode) and may be reproduced with attribution to the IDB and for any non-commercial purpose, as provided below. No derivative work is allowed.Any dispute related to the use of the works of the IDB that cannot be settled amicably shall be submitted to arbitration pursuant to the UNCITRAL rules. The use of the IDB's name for any purp… Show more

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“…Hence, the methodology has allowed the discovery of relationships among financial and macroeconomic variables that reveal the importance of Venezuelan monetary, fiscal and foreign exchange institutional arrangements. The policy implications that can be derived from the particular analysis of the Venezuelan case tend to point at modifications of the Venezuelan institutional arrangement in order to circumvent the monetary effects of fiscal and foreign exchange actions on money creation, as it has been already suggested in Carvallo and Pagliacci (2016) and Chirinos and Pagliacci (2017).…”
Section: Summary and Concluding Remarksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, the methodology has allowed the discovery of relationships among financial and macroeconomic variables that reveal the importance of Venezuelan monetary, fiscal and foreign exchange institutional arrangements. The policy implications that can be derived from the particular analysis of the Venezuelan case tend to point at modifications of the Venezuelan institutional arrangement in order to circumvent the monetary effects of fiscal and foreign exchange actions on money creation, as it has been already suggested in Carvallo and Pagliacci (2016) and Chirinos and Pagliacci (2017).…”
Section: Summary and Concluding Remarksmentioning
confidence: 99%