Transmission of Nominal Exchange Rate Changes to Export Prices and Trade Flows and Implications for Exchange Rate Policy
Oliver Holtemöller, Mathias Hoffmann
Deutsche Bundesbank Discussion Paper 21/2009,
2009
Abstract
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Quantifying the Effects of Abandoning National Monetary Policy
Oliver Holtemöller
Proceedings of the EcoMod International Conference on Policy Modelling (CD-ROM),
2004
Abstract
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Is the European Monetary Union an Endogenous Currency Area? The Example of the Labor Markets
Herbert S. Buscher, Hubert Gabrisch
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 7,
2009
Abstract
Our study tries to find out whether wage dynamics between Euro member countries became more synchronized through the adoption of the common currency. We calculate bivarate correlation coefficients of wage and wage cost dynamics and run a model of endogenously induced changes of coefficients, which are explained by other variables being also endogenous: trade intensity, sectoral specialization, financial integration. We used a panel data structure to allow for cross-section weights for country-pair observations. We use instrumental variable regressions in order to disentangle exogenous from endogenous influences. We applied these techniques to real and nominal wage dynamics and to dynamics of unit labor costs. We found evidence for persistent asymmetries in nominal wage formation despite a single currency and monetary policy, responsible for diverging unit labor costs and for emerging trade imbalances among the EMU member countries.
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Stages of the 2007/2008 Global Financial Crisis: Is there a Wandering Asset Price Bubble?
Lucjan T. Orlowski
Economics E-Journal 43. Munich Personal RePEc Archive 2008,
2009
Abstract
This study identifies five distinctive stages of the current global financial crisis: the meltdown of the subprime mortgage market; spillovers into broader credit market; the liquidity crisis epitomized by the fallout of Northern Rock, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers with counterparty risk effects on other financial institutions; the commodity price bubble, and the ultimate demise of investment banking in the U.S. The study argues that the severity of the crisis is influenced strongly by changeable allocations of global savings coupled with excessive credit creation, which lead to over-pricing of varied types of assets. The study calls such process a “wandering asset-price bubble“. Unstable allocations elevate market, credit, and liquidity risks. Monetary policy responses aimed at stabilizing financial markets are proposed.
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Stages of the Ongoing Global Financial Crisis: Is There a Wandering Asset Bubble?
Lucjan T. Orlowski
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 11,
2008
Abstract
This study argues that the severity of the current global financial crisis is strongly influenced by changeable allocations of the global savings. This process is named a “wandering asset bubble”. Since its original outbreak induced by the demise of the subprime mortgage market and the mortgage-backed securities in the U.S., this crisis has reverberated across other credit areas, structured financial products and global financial institutions. Four distinctive stages of the crisis are identified: the meltdown of the subprime mortgage market, spillovers into broader credit market, the liquidity crisis epitomized by the fallout of Bear Sterns with some contagion effects on other financial institutions, and the commodity price bubble. Monetary policy responses aimed at stabilizing financial markets are proposed.
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Monetary Policy and Financial (In)stability: An Integrated Micro–Macro Approach
Ferre De Graeve, Thomas Kick, Michael Koetter
Journal of Financial Stability,
No. 3,
2008
Abstract
Evidence on central banks’ twin objective, monetary and financial stability, is scarce. We suggest an integrated micro–macro approach with two core virtues. First, we measure financial stability directly at the bank level as the probability of distress. Second, we integrate a microeconomic hazard model for bank distress and a standard macroeconomic model. The advantage of this approach is to incorporate micro information, to allow for non-linearities and to permit general feedback effects between financial distress and the real economy. We base the analysis on German bank and macro data between 1995 and 2004. Our results confirm the existence of a trade-off between monetary and financial stability. An unexpected tightening of monetary policy increases the probability of distress. This effect disappears when neglecting microeffects and non-linearities, underlining their importance. Distress responses are largest for small cooperative banks, weak distress events, and at times when capitalization is low. An important policy implication is that the separation of financial supervision and monetary policy requires close collaboration among members in the European System of Central Banks and national bank supervisors.
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To Whom to Peg? Evaluating the Optimum Currency Area for the Ruble
Stefan Eichler, Alexander Karmann
Der Einfluss der Globalisierung auf die wirtschaftliche und kulturelle Entwicklung - betrachtet aus russischer und deutscher Perspektive,
2008
Abstract
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Three methods of forecasting currency crises: Which made the run in signaling the South African currency crisis of June 2006?
Tobias Knedlik, Rolf Scheufele
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 17,
2007
Abstract
In this paper we test the ability of three of the most popular methods to forecast the South African currency crisis of June 2006. In particular we are interested in the out-ofsample performance of these methods. Thus, we choose the latest crisis to conduct an out-of-sample experiment. In sum, the signals approach was not able to forecast the outof- sample crisis of correctly; the probit approach was able to predict the crisis but just with models, that were based on raw data. Employing a Markov-regime-switching approach also allows to predict the out-of-sample crisis. The answer to the question of which method made the run in forecasting the June 2006 currency crisis is: the Markovswitching approach, since it called most of the pre-crisis periods correctly. However, the “victory” is not straightforward. In-sample, the probit models perform remarkably well and it is also able to detect, at least to some extent, out-of-sample currency crises before their occurrence. It can, therefore, not be recommended to focus on one approach only when evaluating the risk for currency crises.
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asset price inflation
Tobias Knedlik, A. Knorr
Systeme monetärer Steuerung - Analyse und Vergleich geldpolitischer Strategien - Schriften zu Ordnungsfragen der Wirtschaft, Band 86,
No. 86,
2007
Abstract
Es ist den wichtigsten Notenbanken in den vergangenen beiden Jahrzehnten sehr erfolgreich gelungen, die Inflationsrate dauerhaft auf einem sehr niedrigen Niveau zu stabilisieren. Im gleichen Zeitraum stiegen allerdings die Preise vieler Vermögensgüter erheblich an. Wirtschaftspolitisch problematisch wäre diese Entwicklung allerdings nur, wenn dieser rapide Preisanstieg nicht nur Veränderungen der Fundamentalfaktoren widerspiegelt, sondern im Wesentlichen auf spekulative Übertreibungen zurückzuführen ist. Die Zahl spekulativer Blasen hat in der jüngeren Vergangenheit nachweislich zugenommen. Ziel dieses Beitrags ist es, den wirtschaftspolitischen Handlungsbedarf bei Vermögenspreisinflationen zu ermitteln. Dazu werden die relevanten Märkte für Assetgüter identifiziert, die Grundlagen der Preisbildung auf diesen Märkten herausgearbeitet, unter Berücksichtigung der jeweiligen Übertragungsmechanismen die möglichen Auswirkungen von Vermögenspreisinflationen auf die gesamtwirtschaftliche Entwicklung diskutiert, die Eignung der Geldpolitik sowie alternativer wirtschaftspolitischer Instrumente zur Abwehr solcher gesamtwirtschaftlicher Störungen erörtert, die aus einer Vermögenspreisinflation herrühren. Wie sich zeigt, lässt sich einer inflationären Entwicklung der Preise von Vermögensgütern, einmal in Gang gekommen, mit dem Instrumentarium der Geldpolitik kaum noch wirksam begegnen. Umso größere Bedeutung kommt deshalb den verfügbaren wirtschaftspolitischen Handlungsalternativen zu: der genauen Analyse des monetären Umfelds und, damit eng verknüpft, einer offensiven Informationspolitik seitens der Notenbank, verbesserte aufsichtsrechtliche Instrumente und die Schaffung bzw. Stärkung derjenigen Institutionen, derer es bedarf, um die mit Vermögenspreisinflationen typischerweise einhergehenden Risiken optimal diversifizieren zu können sowie den daraus ebenfalls resultierenden Strukturanpassungen zu den geringsten gesamtwirtschaftlichen Kosten zu bewältigen.
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Geldpolitische Strategien im Umbruch
Diemo Dietrich, Albrecht F. Michler
Systeme monetärer Steuerung - Analyse und Vergleich geldpolitischer Strategien. Schriften zu Ordnungsfragen der Wirtschaft, Band 86,
No. 86,
2007
Abstract
Geldpolitische Strategien, insbesondere die der EZB, sind in jüngerer Vergangenheit verstärkt in den Fokus der öffentlichen und wissenschaftlichen Debatte gelangt. Nach einer Einführung in konzeptionelle Grundlagen geldpolitischer Strategien vergleicht die vorliegende Arbeit mit Inflationssteuerung und Geldmengensteuerung die beiden vorherrschenden geldpolitischen Stratgien. Kriterien sind hierbei unter anderem die Modellierung des Transmissionsmechanismus, die Rolle von Erwartungen, die Bedeutung nominaler Anker sowie Transparenz und Verantwortlichkeit. Den Abschluß bildet eine kritische Würdigung der aktuellen EZB-Strategie.
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