Term of Trade Shocks in a Monetary Union: an Application to West-Africa    
    
    
Loïc Batté
Agnès Bénassy-Quéré
Benjamin Carton
Gilles Dufrénot
	Loïc Batté
Agnès Bénassy-Quéré
Benjamin Carton
Gilles Dufrénot
 Highlights :
 Highlights :
	 Abstract :
 Abstract :We propose a two-country DSGE model of the Dutch disease in a monetary union, calibrated on Nigeria and WAEMU. Three monetary regimes are successively studied at the union level: a flexible exchange rate with constant money supply, a flexible exchange rate with an accommodating monetary policy, and a fixed exchange rate regime. We find that, in the face of oil shocks, the most stabilizing regime for Nigeria is a fixed money supply whereas it is a fixed exchange rate for WAEMU. However, the introduction of an oil stabilization fund can reduce the disagreement on the common policy rule. Furthermore, the two zones may agree on a fixed money-supply rule in the face of both oil and agricultural price shocks.
 Keywords :
Dutch disease | DSGE | Monetary union | Optimal monetary policy
 Keywords :
Dutch disease | DSGE | Monetary union | Optimal monetary policy
 JEL : 
E52, F41, Q33
 JEL : 
E52, F41, Q33
	
    
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