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The Transmission of U. S. Monetary Policy Shocks to Developing Economies: Evidence from Vietnam

The Transmission of U. S. Monetary Policy Shocks to Developing Economies: Evidence from Vietnam

Title

The Transmission of U. S. Monetary Policy Shocks to Developing Economies: Evidence from Vietnam

Authors

  • Hai Nguyen Duc
    HADUNG Company Limited, My Hao, Hung Yen, Vietnam
  • Hang Trinh Thi Thu
    VNU University of Economics and Business, Hanoi, Vietnam

Abstract

Purpose: This study aims to analyze how U.S. monetary policy shocks affect the economy of Vietnam through key transmission channels, including trade, investment flows, and financial markets.
Design/methodology/approach: This study employs a Structural Vector Autoregression (SVAR) approach by using quarterly data from 2010 to 2023 and incorporates seven key variables, categorized into external (oil prices, foreign interest rates) and domestic (GDP, CPI, exchange rate, discount rate, and money supply) sectors.
Findings: The results indicate that a positive shock to U.S. policy rates is followed by a short-run decline in output growth of Vietnam, accompanied by an adjustment in the depreciation rate, consistent with tighter external financial conditions transmitting to real activity and the exchange rate. Oil-price shocks generate measurable movements in output growth and the exchange rate, with the output response exhibiting short-run volatility and subsequent adjustment over the horizon considered, while inflation dynamics respond within a narrow range.
Originality/value: The paper develops a small-open-economy SVAR for Vietnam that jointly identifies U.S. policy-rate and global oil-price shocks over the 2010–2023 period and benchmarks the results against a conventional VAR model. Thereby providing an integrated, state-of-the-art picture of how external monetary and commodity shocks transmit to Vietnam’s macroeconomic variables.
Implications: These findings carry direct policy and risk-management implications. The dominance of the exchange-rate and interest-rate channels indicates that these variables are the key instruments for cushioning Vietnam against external monetary and oil-price shocks. Greater exchange-rate flexibility and timely monetary adjustments are therefore required to preserve macroeconomic stability. The SVAR framework maps alternative paths of U.S. interest rates and global oil prices into quantitative scenarios for output, inflation, and the exchange rate. Such scenario-based evaluation lies within the domain of decision sciences and enables systematic comparison of policy and risk-management options under uncertainty.

Keywords

monetary policy, structural vector autoregressive (SVAR), foreign shocks, macro variables, Vietnam

Classification-JEL

C32, E52, F42, E31, E44

Pages

1-24

How to Cite

Nguyen Duc, H., & Thi Thu, H. T. (2026). The Transmission of U. S. Monetary Policy Shocks to Developing Economies: Evidence from Vietnam. Advances in Decision Sciences, 30(4), 1-24.

https://doi.org/10.47654/v30y2026i4p1-24

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ISSN 2090-3359 (Print)
ISSN 2090-3367 (Online)

Scientific and Business World

Asia University, Taiwan

8.3
2024CiteScore
 
88th percentile
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SCImago Journal & Country Rank
Q1 in Scopus
CiteScore 2024 = 8.3
CiteScoreTracker 2025 = 6.9
SNIP 2024 = 0.632
SJR Quartile = Q3
SJR 2025 = 0.240
H-Index = 18

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