Shock Persistence and the Choice of Foreign Exchange Regime : An Empirical Note from Mexico

The academic and policy debate about optimal foreign exchange rate regimes for emerging economies, has focused more on the theoretical costs and benefits of possible regimes, than on their actual performance. The authors report on what can be called exchange-rate-regime-dependent differential shock persistence - that is, the time output takes to return to its trend after a negative shock - in a sample of countries representing various points on the spectrum of nominal foreign exchange flexibility. They find strong evidence that Mexico's stimulated output recovery after a negative external shock was faster (a third as long) when the country's policymakers let the nominal foreign exchange rate float, than when they fixed it, and much faster than in other developing countries that kept nominal foreign exchange rates constant, especially those that resorted to currency board arrangements to support that constancy. These results are insufficient to guide the choice of regime (they lack general equilibrium value, and are based on a limited sample of countries), but they highlight an important practical consideration in making that choice: How long it takes for output to adjust after negative shocks, is sensitive to the level of rigidity of the foreign exchange regime. This factor may be critical when the social costs of those adjustments are not negligible.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giugale, Marcelo, Korobow, Adam
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2000-06
Subjects:borrowing costs, capital account, carbon, carbon dioxide, carbon dioxide emissions, central banks, country sample, cpi, currency, currency board, currency boards, currency crises, devaluation, developing countries, domestic economy, domestic interest rates, econometric analysis, economic dynamics, economic statistics, economic time series, economists, emerging countries, emerging economies, emerging markets, empirical research, employment, endogenous variables, equilibrium, exchange arrangements, exchange rate, exchange rate regime, exchange rate regimes, exchange systems, external borrowing, external shock, external shocks, financial crises, financial integration, fiscal constraints, fiscal policy, fixed exchange rate, fixed exchange rates, flexible exchange rates, foreign exchange, foreign exchange rate, foreign exchange rates, foreign shocks, forestry, inflation, interest rates, international monetary fund, joint implementation, labor markets, long term, M2, macroeconomic volatility, macroeconomics, market economies, monetary policy, monetary unions, multipliers, nominal exchange rate, nominal exchange rates, nominal interest rate, nominal interest rates, output recovery, output volatility, policy makers, policy options, policy research, political economy, post Keynesian economics, private sector, real interest, real interest rate, real output, real variables, risk premia, social costs, standard deviation, statistical analysis, trade policies, welfare effects, foreign exchange administration, economic shocks, outputs, exchange rate indicators, economic recovery, nominal protection rate, fixed rate bonds, equilibrium theory, social assessments,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21454
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