Salma Gallas
Email: salma.gallas2@gmail.com
Salma Gallas is a researcher at the University of Sousse, Tunisia, specializing in risk management, financial markets, systemic risk, and climate finance. Her doctoral research focuses on financial risk management, examining how regulatory frameworks and sustainable finance practices contribute to reducing systemic vulnerabilities within financial systems. In parallel with her research activities, she serves as a lecturer at the Higher Institute of Finance and Taxation of Sousse (ISFFS), University of Sousse, where she teaches courses related to finance and risk management. Salma has been actively involved in various research projects addressing contemporary challenges linked to macroprudential regulation, banking crises, and the resilience of financial systems in the face of climate-related risks.
Papers Published in World Economics:
The Conduct of Macroprudential Regulation and Monetary Policy on Financial Stability
The study investigates the impact of macroprudential and monetary policy shocks on financial and macroeconomic conditions, emphasising their complementary roles in achieving financial stability across 11 OECD economies from 2000 Q1 to 2018 Q4. Using a vector autoregressive (VAR) methodology within a dynamic data panel model, the analysis reveals that contractionary monetary policy shocks reduce financial variables but increase price levels, a phenomenon termed the “Price Puzzle”. Tightening macroprudential policy is found to negatively affect credit growth and economic output, highlighting its role in moderating financial excesses but potentially dampening economic activity. Effective coordination between macroprudential and monetary policies is essential to minimise political conflicts and enhance financial system stability at both macroeconomic and financial levels.
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The Impact of Macroprudential Transparency on Price Stability in Advanced and Emerging Economies
Transparent macroprudential policy promotes economic and financial stability by maintaining price stability and enhancing the resilience of financial systems. This study evaluates the impact of macroprudential transparency on inflation levels and expectations using data from 65 economies during the period 2000–2015. It employs panel data methodology and the generalised method of moments approach. The research findings reveal that macroprudential transparency is associated with lower inflation rates and inflation expectations in developing economies and emerging markets. Additionally, the efficiency of prudential transparency is confirmed for countries that do not adopt inflation targeting.
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