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This paper describes the methodology and the data used to compute nominal and real effective exchange rate indices in the International Monetary Fund’s Information Notice System (INS). In particular, it highlights improvements to the INS implemented over 1994-96, including modifications to the computational methodology, use of updated data, and extension of the INS to recent Fund members.
Exports and Imports --- Finance: General --- Foreign Exchange --- Current Account Adjustment --- Short-term Capital Movements --- General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data) --- Trade: General --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Finance --- International economics --- Real effective exchange rates --- Competition --- Exports --- Exchange rate indexes --- Exchange rates --- Financial markets --- International trade --- United States
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This paper studies how uncertainty about fundamentals contributed to currency crises from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective. We find evidenceCbased on a monthly dataset of Consensus forecasts for six Asian countries in the period January 1995-May 2001Cconfirming the theoretical predictions (from both unique- and multiple-equilibria models) that: (i) speculative attacks depend not only on actual and expected fundamentals but also on the variance of speculators' expectations about them; and (ii) the sign of the effect of the variance depends on whether expected fundamentals are "good" or "bad." These results are robust to the definition of exchange rate pressure indices, the estimation sample (precrisis vs. full sample), the method chosen to avoid spurious correlations, and possible time-varying coefficients for the mean, the variance, and the threshold separating good from bad expected fundamentals.
Foreign Exchange --- Macroeconomics --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Expectations --- Speculations --- Asymmetric and Private Information --- Monetary Systems --- Standards --- Regimes --- Government and the Monetary System --- Payment Systems --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Monetary economics --- Economic & financial crises & disasters --- Exchange rates --- Currencies --- Currency crises --- Exchange rate indexes --- Exchange rate arrangements --- Money --- Financial crises --- Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, People's Republic of China
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This paper analyzes empirically the recent Asian financial crisis using high frequency data of exchange rates and stock indices of the Philippines and Thailand. Utilizing standard time-series techniques, this study confirms that there is evidence that developments in some sectoral indices—including those of banking and financial sectors—seem to have caused upward pressure on exchange rates. A correlation between some of these variables is also found to be strong across countries in the crisis period, thereby confirming the importance of the linkages between financial markets as a transmission channel of the Thai crisis to the Philippines.
Financial Risk Management --- Foreign Exchange --- Investments: Stocks --- Macroeconomics --- International Finance: General --- Pension Funds --- Non-bank Financial Institutions --- Financial Instruments --- Institutional Investors --- Price Level --- Inflation --- Deflation --- Financial Crises --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Investment & securities --- Economic & financial crises & disasters --- Exchange rates --- Stocks --- Asset prices --- Exchange rate indexes --- Financial crises --- Financial institutions --- Prices --- Currency crises --- Thailand
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This paper describes the result and the methodology of updating nominal and real effective exchange rate weights on the basis of trade data over 1999-2001. The underlying framework is an updated version of the IMF's current effective exchange rate calculation, which uses weights largely based on 1989-91 data. Since then, substantial changes have occurred in international trade relations, warranting a recalculation of effective exchange rate indices on the basis of new trade patterns. Updated weights show that the United States and developing countries (most notably China) have grown in their importance in global trade, while Japan and the European Union have declined, with substantial implications for the path of the dollar and exchange rate effects of emerging market crises since 1995.
Electronic books. -- local. --- Foreign exchange rates -- Methodology. --- Foreign exchange. --- Investments: Commodities --- Foreign Exchange --- Commodity Markets --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Investment & securities --- Real effective exchange rates --- Exchange rates --- Real exchange rates --- Exchange rate indexes --- Commodities --- Commercial products --- United States --- Foreign exchange rates --- Methodology.
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The Monetary Authority of Singapore, instead of relying on short-term interest rates or monetary aggregates as its monetary policy instrument, conducts policy by managing the trade-weighted exchange rate index (TWI). This paper investigates how this operating procedure actually works. For empirical purposes, it assumes the authorities follow a reaction function that aims the TWI at stabilizing expected inflation and maintaining output at potential. A partial adjustment mechanism is included to dampen the actual changes in the exchange rate. The estimates confirm that the major focus of monetary policy in Singapore is controlling inflation. The estimated changes in the TWI track the actual change relatively well, and the estimated parameters are as expected. Accordingly, they support the hypothesis that monetary policy in Singapore can be described by a forward-looking policy rule that reacts to both inflation and output volatility. The results suggest that Singapore's monetary policy has mainly reacted to large deviations in the target variables, which is consistent with monetary policy's medium-term orientation.
Finance: General --- Foreign Exchange --- Inflation --- Forecasting --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Monetary Policy --- Central Banks and Their Policies --- Open Economy Macroeconomics --- Forecasting and Other Model Applications --- International Financial Markets --- Macroeconomics --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Economic Forecasting --- Finance --- Exchange rates --- Exchange rate indexes --- Economic forecasting --- Currency markets --- Prices --- Exchange rate adjustments --- Foreign exchange market --- Singapore
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This paper analyzes determinants and consequences of FX interventions in the Kyrgyz Republic. Most of the literature on the topic focuses on advanced and emerging economies and this paper provides new evidence from a low-income country. We find that FX interventions take place in response to movements in the exchange rate and its volatility. There is also evidence of “leaning against the wind”, which is more pronounced for relatively larger FX sales and purchases. The “leaning against the wind” is asymmetric toward FX sales and largely reflects leaning against depreciation of domestic currency. We document a varying degree of de-facto exchange rate stability despite the de-jure floating exchange rate regime. During most of the sample, the exchange rate management index was relatively low in line with the floating exchange rate regime, with the exception of the period from 2018 Q4 until the COVID-19 shock, during which the exchange rate management index was relatively high.
Business and Economics --- Finance: General --- Foreign Exchange --- Central Banks and Their Policies --- Information and Market Efficiency --- Event Studies --- International Financial Markets --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Finance --- Exchange rates --- Exchange rate adjustments --- Currency markets --- Exchange rate indexes --- Financial markets --- Foreign exchange market --- Kyrgyz Republic
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This paper analyzes determinants and consequences of FX interventions in the Kyrgyz Republic. Most of the literature on the topic focuses on advanced and emerging economies and this paper provides new evidence from a low-income country. We find that FX interventions take place in response to movements in the exchange rate and its volatility. There is also evidence of “leaning against the wind”, which is more pronounced for relatively larger FX sales and purchases. The “leaning against the wind” is asymmetric toward FX sales and largely reflects leaning against depreciation of domestic currency. We document a varying degree of de-facto exchange rate stability despite the de-jure floating exchange rate regime. During most of the sample, the exchange rate management index was relatively low in line with the floating exchange rate regime, with the exception of the period from 2018 Q4 until the COVID-19 shock, during which the exchange rate management index was relatively high.
Kyrgyz Republic --- Business and Economics --- Finance: General --- Foreign Exchange --- Central Banks and Their Policies --- Information and Market Efficiency --- Event Studies --- International Financial Markets --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Finance --- Exchange rates --- Exchange rate adjustments --- Currency markets --- Exchange rate indexes --- Financial markets --- Foreign exchange market
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This Selected Issues paper assesses The Gambia’s external competitiveness by reviewing developments in several indicators, ranging from exchange rate-based indices to survey-based assessments of the investment climate. The paper reviews the evolution of several multilateral and bilateral real exchange rate indices for The Gambia, and summarizes the results of a regression analysis that tests for misalignment of the exchange rate. The paper also evaluates the degree of autonomy extended to the Central Bank of The Gambia (CBG) under the provisions of the new Central Bank of The Gambia Act, 2005.
Gambia -- Economic conditions. --- Gambia -- Economic policy. --- International monetary fund -- Gambia. --- Banks and Banking --- Exports and Imports --- Foreign Exchange --- Macroeconomics --- Industries: Financial Services --- Banks --- Depository Institutions --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Mortgages --- Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions --- Price Level --- Inflation --- Deflation --- Development Planning and Policy: Trade Policy --- Factor Movement --- Foreign Exchange Policy --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Banking --- International economics --- Finance --- Real exchange rates --- Real effective exchange rates --- Exchange rate indexes --- Personal income --- National accounts --- Price stabilization --- Prices --- Banks and banking --- Income --- Government policy --- Loans --- Gambia, The --- Gambia --- Economic conditions. --- Economic policy.
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We compare how logit (fixed effects) and probit early warning systems (EWS) predict insample and out-of-sample currency crises in emerging markets (EMs). We look at episodes of currency crises that took place in 29 EMs between January 1995 and December 2012. Stronger real GDP growth rates and higher net foreign assets significantly reduce the probability of experiencing a currency crisis, while high levels of credit to the private sector increase it. We find that the logit and probit EWS out-of-sample performances are broadly similar, and that the EWS performance can be very sensitive both to the size of the estimation sample, and to the crisis definition employed. For macroeconomic policy purposes, we conclude that a currency crisis definition identifying more rather than less crisis episodes should be used, even if this may lead to the risk of issuing false alarms.
Currency crises --- Logits --- Probits --- Biomathematics --- Distribution (Probability theory) --- Probabilities --- Transformations (Mathematics) --- Logit transformation --- Logarithms --- Financial crises --- Currency question --- Foreign exchange --- Prevention. --- Financial Risk Management --- Foreign Exchange --- Macroeconomics --- International Finance: General --- Current Account Adjustment --- Short-term Capital Movements --- International Finance Forecasting and Simulation --- Financing Policy --- Financial Risk and Risk Management --- Capital and Ownership Structure --- Value of Firms --- Goodwill --- Financial Crises --- Economic & financial crises & disasters --- Currency --- Early warning systems --- Exchange rate indexes --- Global financial crisis of 2008-2009 --- Crisis management --- Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 --- Mexico
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