“…From a government's perspective, enhancing CBI implies substantial economic and political benefits that often outweigh the costs of losing direct control over a powerful instrument. Besides sending a strong signal to international investors, delivering relief from speculative pressures, CBI 4 A substantial literature already discusses the effectiveness of legal central bank reform in fostering greater de facto CBI (Berger, de Haan and Eijffinger, 2001;Hayo and Hefeker, 2002;Hielscher and Markwardt, 2012;de Haan and Eijffinger, 2019). Although Keefer and Stasavage (2003), Voigt (2008), andHielscher andMarkwardt (2012), argue that the effectiveness of CBI conditionality might be limited in weak institutional environments, recent findings of Garriga and Rodriguez (2019) indicate that granting greater legal independence might help ground inflation, independent of these aforementioned institutional factors.…”