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The real exchange rate and the output response in four EU accession countries

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posted on 2006-03-29, 10:34 authored by Terence C. Mills, Eric J. Pentecost
This paper estimates the response of output to changes in the real exchange rate in four transitional economies. The theoretical effect is ambiguous since the demandside effect works against the supply-side effect. On the demand-side, a depreciation of the real exchange rate should improve competitiveness and enhance the demand for output, whereas the supply-side effect suggests that output may fall as competitiveness improves since this makes imported inputs more expensive, thereby raising the cost of production. The econometric results show that, inter alia, the real exchange rate is not an important determinant of the long-run level of GDP in the Czech Republic or Hungary, but that a real appreciation leads to a persistent fall in output in Poland and a sustained rise in output in Slovakia. A short run real appreciation leads to a temporary decline in output growth in both the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

Funding

This paper forms part of the ESRC funded project (Award No. L1382511013) “Business Cycle Volatility and Economic Growth: A Comparative Time Series Study”, which itself is part of the Understanding the Evolving Macroeconomy Research programme.

History

School

  • Business and Economics

Department

  • Economics

Pages

86594 bytes

Publisher

© Loughborough University

Publication date

2000

Notes

This is Business Cycle Volatility and Economic Growth Research Paper No. 00/4.

Language

  • en

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