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Moderator:  Calla Wiemer (calla.wiemer@acaes.us)

Trilemma, Dilemma, or Amalgamation? The Effect of Global Forces on Domestic Interest Rates

In a landmark 2015 paper provocatively titled “Dilemma Not Trilemma”, Hélène Rey argued that the policy space for small open economies does not, after all, afford a choice, given open capital accounts, between exchange rate stabilization and monetary policy independence. The bulk of the paper documents a global financial cycle under which capital flows, credit, leverage, and asset prices all move in sync across international boundaries. It is then taken on faith that with such ebbs and flows of finance washing around, the only way to carve out space for independent monetary policy is through capital controls or, in a more evolved spirit, macroprudential measures. Any empirical examination of the interplay between the exchange rate and monetary policy under the classic trilemma was beyond the scope of the paper.

A perspective on the global financial cycle from the domestic side of a small open economy was presented by Assistant Governor of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Margarita Debuque-Gonzales at our ACAES session at the 2026 Allied Social Science Association Annual Meeting. Debuque-Gonzales identified periods of disconnect between short-run market rates of interest and the central bank policy rate in association with foreign capital flows into the Philippines. Applying a Markov-switching model, she showed that under global risk-on conditions, inflows of foreign capital drove the Philippine treasury-bill rate down below the policy rate to undermine monetary policy transmission. With the switch to risk-off conditions, short-term rates reconnected to the policy rate. The key insight is that applicability of the trilemma is state dependent.  

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Review of Raul Fabella, Capitalism and Inclusion under Weak Institutions

published by the University of the Philippines, Center for Integrative and Development Studies, 2018. pdf download

The lackluster development performance of the Philippines over the span of many decades is routinely blamed on "weak institutions" by Filipinos. In this thought-provoking book, University of the Philippines economics professor and Philippine National Scientist Raul Fabella advises on how to overcome the curse of weak institutions to achieve robust growth with poverty reduction.

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On China As a Model for the Philippines (Fabella Review Addendum)

In the book Capitalism and Inclusion under Weak Institutions, reviewed in a previous post, author Raul Fabella points to a lack of social coherence in the Philippines as undermining economic progress and contrasts this with the Chinese case where "a strong sense of identity and mission" has propelled phenomenal economic growth. Judging by differences in receptivity to the statement "most people can be trusted", Fabella may be onto something. Survey results presented in Figure 1 show 62.7% of Chinese agreeing with this statement versus just 2.8% of Filipinos. Personally, I am mystified by these results having spent many years in both countries and not finding Filipinos any less trustworthy than Chinese. Yet the results do lend credence to Fabella's thesis.

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PAST Webinar on Financial Digitalization and Inclusive Covid-19 Recovery

When:  21 April 2021, 11am Manila time (GMT+8)

Speaker:  Benjamin E. Diokno, Governor, Philippine Central Bank

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PAST Conference on the Economics of Pandemics

When:  9-13 November 2020

Sponsor:  Philippine Economic Society

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