Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore
This paper uses a smooth transition autoregressive regression to estimate the adjustment speed of exchange rate in Singapore, a well-managed small open economy in which exchange rate policy plays an important role in facilitating macroeconomic adjustment and controlling inflation. The result of our...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1465102023-03-05T15:34:51Z Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore Yan, Fangli Yip, Paul Sau Leung School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Economic development Exchange Rate Policy Long-run Neutrality This paper uses a smooth transition autoregressive regression to estimate the adjustment speed of exchange rate in Singapore, a well-managed small open economy in which exchange rate policy plays an important role in facilitating macroeconomic adjustment and controlling inflation. The result of our estimation suggests that the adjustment speed is faster than estimates reported in the literature. In addition, parallel with the long-run neutrality and short-run nonneutrality of monetary policy in large economies, we provide a pioneer discussion and empirical evidence of long-run neutrality and short-run nonneutrality of exchange rate policy in the small open economy. To our knowledge, we are the first group of researchers conducting rigorous study on this important issue for small open economies. Finally, we found evidence of the Harrold–Balassa–Samuelson (HBS) effect, and our results support Lothian and Taylor's argument that failure to include the effect in the estimation would lead to biased estimate in the adjustment speed. Thus, one should be cautious of the significant portion of past empirical studies that did not incorporate the HBS effect in their estimations. Future empirical studies should include the effect in the estimations and tests, or at least test for the absence of the effect before excluding it from the estimations. Accepted version 2021-02-23T01:15:53Z 2021-02-23T01:15:53Z 2019 Journal Article Yan, F., & Yip, P. S. L. (2021). Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore. International Journal of Finance and Economics, 26(1), 171-184. doi:10.1002/ijfe.1783 1076-9307 0000-0001-9189-0800 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146510 10.1002/ijfe.1783 2-s2.0-85075758640 1 26 171 184 en International Journal of Finance and Economics This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Yan, F., & Yip, P. S. L. (2021). Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore. International Journal of Finance and Economics, 26(1), 171-184, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1002/ijfe.1783. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Economic development Exchange Rate Policy Long-run Neutrality Yan, Fangli Yip, Paul Sau Leung Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore |
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This paper uses a smooth transition autoregressive regression to estimate the adjustment speed of exchange rate in Singapore, a well-managed small open economy in which exchange rate policy plays an important role in facilitating macroeconomic adjustment and controlling inflation. The result of our estimation suggests that the adjustment speed is faster than estimates reported in the literature. In addition, parallel with the long-run neutrality and short-run nonneutrality of monetary policy in large economies, we provide a pioneer discussion and empirical evidence of long-run neutrality and short-run nonneutrality of exchange rate policy in the small open economy. To our knowledge, we are the first group of researchers conducting rigorous study on this important issue for small open economies. Finally, we found evidence of the Harrold–Balassa–Samuelson (HBS) effect, and our results support Lothian and Taylor's argument that failure to include the effect in the estimation would lead to biased estimate in the adjustment speed. Thus, one should be cautious of the significant portion of past empirical studies that did not incorporate the HBS effect in their estimations. Future empirical studies should include the effect in the estimations and tests, or at least test for the absence of the effect before excluding it from the estimations. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Yan, Fangli Yip, Paul Sau Leung |
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Article |
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Yan, Fangli Yip, Paul Sau Leung |
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Yan, Fangli |
title |
Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore |
title_short |
Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore |
title_full |
Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore |
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Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore |
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Nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from Singapore |
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nonlinear adjustment of exchange rate and exchange rate policy : lessons from singapore |
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2021 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146510 |
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