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MODS Metadata of Economic growth and unemployment under alternative monetary policy regimes: evidence from South Africa

roleTerm ( text )
advisor 
namePart
Uwilingiye, J., Dr. 
roleTerm ( text )
author 
namePart
Kifa, Masini Guylain 
dateAccessioned
2014-06-10T17:37:13Z 
dateAvailable
2014-06-10T17:37:13Z 
dateIssued
2014-06-10 
dateSubmitted
2014 
identifier ( uri )
http://hdl.handle.net/10210/11147 
note
M.Com. (Economic Development and Policy Issues) 
abstract
Monetary policy is not only the process by which the monetary authority of a country controls the supply of money, but is furthermore a sufficient tool to overcome the problem of economic growth and unemployment. This can take place when the policy instruments – interest rates (Repo) and money supply growth (M3) – have significant effects on these macroeconomic variables. However, the issue of the efficacy of monetary policy on GDP growth and employment creation is at the centre of debates among researchers. Some researchers are of the opinion that the objective of monetary policy in achieving and maintaining price stability is founded on the idea that inflation is not good for economic growth, employment creation and income equality but, instead, only secures macroeconomic environment. In South Africa, the efficiency of different monetary policy tools, inflation and money-supply targeting, on economic performance has been questioned. Moreover, the issue of the high level of unemployment remains controversial among scholars. Therefore, the structural vector-error correction model (VECM) methods was used with quarterly data in order to investigate the impact of aggregate money supply (M3), interest rate (Repo) and real exchange rate on CPIX (inflation) , economic growth (GDP volume rate) and unemployment (joblessness rate) in South Africa for the period 1986 to 2010. The results show that both monetary-policy regimes have positively impacted on economic growth, but the impact of the pre-inflation-targeting regime is higher. Moreover, a weak positive liaison between monetary policy and unemployment is observed, but the post-inflation-targeting regime shows a higher percentage decrease in unemployment than the pre-inflation targeting period. Beyond any doubt, the research approves the engagement of the SARB to monitor (target) CPIX (inflation) due to its ability to ensure price stability and create a stable economic environment favourable to economic performance. 
languageTerm ( rfc3066 )
en 
accessCondition ( useAndReproduction )
University of Johannesburg 
topic
Monetary policy - South Africa 
topic
Inflation (Finance) - South Africa 
topic
Economic development - South Africa 
topic
Unemployment - South Africa 
topic
Foreign exchange rates - South Africa 
topic
Interest rates - South Africa 
topic
Monetary policy - Developing countries 
title
Economic growth and unemployment under alternative monetary policy regimes: evidence from South Africa 
genre
Thesis 

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http://hdl.handle.net/10210/109309
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