The adverse effects of real exchange rate variability in Latin America and the Caribbean



Document title: The adverse effects of real exchange rate variability in Latin America and the Caribbean
Journal: Journal of applied economics
Database: CLASE
System number: 000430344
ISSN: 1667-6726
Authors: 1
Institutions: 1International Monetary Fund, Washington, Distrito de Columbia. Estados Unidos de América
Year:
Season: May
Volumen: 18
Number: 1
Pages: 99-120
Country: Argentina
Language: Inglés
Document type: Artículo
Approach: Analítico, descriptivo
English abstract The paper examines the pros and cons of anticipated appreciation and the asymmetric effects of short-term exchange rate fluctuations in a sample of countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. On the demand side, exchange rate depreciation increases competitiveness and export growth, expanding output growth. On the supply side, depreciation increases the cost of imported inputs, increasing output capacity constraints and accelerating price inflation. The time-series evidence indicates that output expansion (contraction) and price deflation (inflation) predominate with anticipated currency appreciation (depreciation). The cross-country results show that exchange rate variability exacerbates the variability of economic activity across countries. Short-term fluctuations of the exchange rate may reflect the adverse effects of unanticipated currency fluctuations. Therefore, more flexibility towards aligning the real effective exchange rate with the underlying fundamentals could help mitigate the adverse effects of higher cost of imports and loss of competitiveness on real growth, and ease inflationary pressures
Disciplines: Economía
Keyword: Economía monetaria,
Desarrollo económico,
Balanza de pagos y deuda externa,
Tipos de cambio,
Crecimiento económico,
Balanza comercial,
Competitividad,
Efectos económicos,
América Latina,
Caribe
Full text: Texto completo (Ver PDF)