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Has financial liberalisation reduced liquidity constraints in Malaysia: some empirical results

Has financial liberalisation reduced liquidity constraints in Malaysia: some empirical results
Has financial liberalisation reduced liquidity constraints in Malaysia: some empirical results
One of the important implications of financial liberalization is the reduction of liquidity constraints. The ability of households to borrow and adjust their financial portfolios has important implications for monetary aggregates and consequently, for the conduct of monetary policy. It is to be observed that the relationship between monetary aggregates and current income will be in a weakened state, in financially liberalized economies. The purpose of the present study is to investigate whether, financial liberalization has reduced liquidity constraints in Malaysia. To do this, an Euler equation has been estimated and an attempt has been made to determine whether, the estimates of l has been reduced in the deregulation era. The results suggest that the fraction of liquidity constrained consumers in Malaysia is quite substantial, and has, in fact, increased to more than 50% of the population in the 1980s-1990s. The study concludes that liquidity constraints have not been reduced as a result of financial liberalization in Malaysia. The important policy implication is that, fiscal policies such as, a temporary tax-cut or debt-finance fiscal spending, and the use of monetary aggregates as indicators of monetary policy can be effective in the presence of liquidity constraints.
0033-5533
68-77
Habibullah, Muzafar Shah
1a2e0b22-25d8-4837-af10-b98b03a59ac1
Smith, Peter
7085f0ad-c538-4208-80f4-e9b3fd36b365
Habibullah, Muzafar Shah
1a2e0b22-25d8-4837-af10-b98b03a59ac1
Smith, Peter
7085f0ad-c538-4208-80f4-e9b3fd36b365

Habibullah, Muzafar Shah and Smith, Peter (2009) Has financial liberalisation reduced liquidity constraints in Malaysia: some empirical results. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 7 (1), 68-77.

Record type: Article

Abstract

One of the important implications of financial liberalization is the reduction of liquidity constraints. The ability of households to borrow and adjust their financial portfolios has important implications for monetary aggregates and consequently, for the conduct of monetary policy. It is to be observed that the relationship between monetary aggregates and current income will be in a weakened state, in financially liberalized economies. The purpose of the present study is to investigate whether, financial liberalization has reduced liquidity constraints in Malaysia. To do this, an Euler equation has been estimated and an attempt has been made to determine whether, the estimates of l has been reduced in the deregulation era. The results suggest that the fraction of liquidity constrained consumers in Malaysia is quite substantial, and has, in fact, increased to more than 50% of the population in the 1980s-1990s. The study concludes that liquidity constraints have not been reduced as a result of financial liberalization in Malaysia. The important policy implication is that, fiscal policies such as, a temporary tax-cut or debt-finance fiscal spending, and the use of monetary aggregates as indicators of monetary policy can be effective in the presence of liquidity constraints.

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Published date: February 2009

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 80301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/80301
ISSN: 0033-5533
PURE UUID: 677bab08-0afb-46be-9b7b-f590aa9bbda6

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Date deposited: 24 Mar 2010
Last modified: 10 Dec 2021 17:37

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Contributors

Author: Muzafar Shah Habibullah
Author: Peter Smith

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