posted on 2024-11-14, 13:21authored byNgoc Hong Nguyen, Charles Harvie, Sandy SuardiSandy Suardi
This article investigates the optimal exchange rate regime in a group of ASEAN countries, which minimizes the adverse effects of foreign demand shocks on real output, the real exchange rate, price level and between country income gap. Using a panel structural vector autoregressive model for small open economies, we show that the extent by which foreign demand shocks influences the between-country income gap depends on the exchange rate regime and the transmission channels through output, the price level and the real exchange rate. Our results show that a fixed exchange rate is better in insulating output and real exchange rates against adverse foreign demand shocks. Nevertheless, a flexible exchange rate regime achieves lower inflation and narrows the income gap across countries. Further, foreign demand shocks explain a larger portion of the forecast error variance of macroeconomic variables under a fixed than under a flexible exchange rate regime.
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Citation
Nguyen, N., Harvie, C. & Suardi, S. (2019). ASEAN income gap and the optimal exchange Rate Regime. Applied Economics, Online First 1-17.