IMF Staff Country Reports

Preview Citation

Format: Chicago

International Monetary Fund. European Dept. "Iceland: Selected Issues", IMF Staff Country Reports 2024, 222 (2024), accessed November 21, 2024, https://doi.org/10.5089/9798400282683.002

Export Citation

  • ProCite
  • RefWorks
  • Reference Manager
  • BibTex
  • Zotero
  • EndNote

Summary

This Selected Issues paper presents a pilot study on integrated policy framework (IPF) in Iceland. The IPF helps assess the appropriate policy responses to shocks for economies vulnerable to capital flow volatility, allowing for some market frictions. Iceland is an advanced economy pilot under the IPF with some of the frictions identified under the IPF framework. The Central Bank of Iceland implements an inflation targeting regime with the possibility of currency intervention within its mandate. The foreign exchange (FX) market in Iceland is assessed to be shallower than in other advanced economies, especially around episodes of global economic and financial stress. Foreign currency assets are mainly due to portfolio allocation of the large pension sector. The authorities should explore options to deepen the foreign currency derivatives market in a manner consistent with continued foreign exchange market stability. Iceland has a history of disruptive speculative foreign currency trading, which points to the need for moving cautiously with reforms to deepening the FX derivatives market. Reforms that could be explored include reassessing the limits on commercial banks’ derivative transactions. This would encourage greater participation of foreign investors in the domestic bond market and facilitate hedging of FX risk, thereby reducing the likelihood of disruptive exchange rate movements.

Subject: Central bank policy rate, Currency markets, Financial markets, Financial services, Foreign exchange, Inflation, Integrated Policy Framework, Prices

Keywords: Central bank policy rate, Currency markets, FX Market shallowness, Global, Iceland pilot study, Inflation, Inflation expectation, QIPF model, Staff team of the International Monetary Fund

Publication Details