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Dissertation paper Real Exchange Rate Misalignments and Trade Competitiveness. The Case of Romania

The Academy of Economic Studies The Faculty of Finance, Insurance, Banking and Stock Exchange Doctoral School of Finance and Banking. Dissertation paper Real Exchange Rate Misalignments and Trade Competitiveness. The Case of Romania MSc Student Zmeu Oleg Coordinator Professor Mois ă Alt ă r

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Dissertation paper Real Exchange Rate Misalignments and Trade Competitiveness. The Case of Romania

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  1. The Academy of Economic StudiesThe Faculty of Finance, Insurance, Banking and Stock ExchangeDoctoral School of Finance and Banking Dissertation paper Real Exchange Rate Misalignments and Trade Competitiveness. The Case of Romania MSc Student Zmeu Oleg Coordinator Professor Moisă Altăr Bucharest 2010

  2. The aims of the paper • Choosing the variables that determine the behavior of the real equilibrium exchange rate (REER) • Estimating the equilibrium exchange rate (the BEER model) • Calculating the real exchange misalignments (RERM) • Choosing the proxies of trade competitiveness • Determining the impact of RERM on trade competitiveness – a VAR approach

  3. Importance of real exchange rate misalignments • Could be used to predict future shifts of the exchange rate (Aguirre, Calderon, (2005)); • May underline the need to adjust the exchange rate; • A likely prelude to financial crisis (Krugman (1979), Kaminsky and Reinhart (1999)); • May affect economic growth (Edwards (1989)); • May boost the economic growth, as was the case of Japan and Germany and more recently, China (Dooley et al. (2003)).

  4. Literature review • The relationship between real exchange rate misalignments and trade competitiveness was predominantly conducted on countries that record great share of exports in GDP; • Balassa (1990) explores the relationships between RERM and the exports of four African countries (Tanzania, Kenya, Ghana and Ivory Cost) during 1974 – 1981. He finds that exports are highly responsive to RERM; • Ghura and Grennes (1993) run regression between RERM and other macroeconomic indicators (saving, exports, investments). The result of their study confirm the economic theory. The exchange rate – an important variable in measuring the relations with abroad. • Söderling (2000) proves that overvalued currency of Cameroon in the 1980s were responsible for a worsening in total exports by 30 – 50%. • Sekkat and Varoudakis (2000) demonstrated that inconsistent macroeconomic policies and RERM are responsible for overvaluation. • Fukunishi (2004) explores the relationships between real exchange rate misalignments and exports competitiveness. He proves that most currencies of Sub-Saharan countries were largely overvalued since their independence in early 1960s. Overvalued currencies discouraged exports and accounted for a peak of 90% misalignment of exchange rate during 1980s.

  5. Data • Quarterly data used were obtained from Eurostat. The missing time series were obtained from the site of National Bank of Romania (www.bnr.ro). • The period covered is Q1 2000 – Q4 2009. • All time series were seasonally adjusted using Census X12 method developed by U.S Census Bureau and implemented in EViews 6. The price indexes (CPI, export unit value, import unit value) have fixed base 2000 = 100. • The stock and flow variables (imports, exports, net foreign assets, final consumption expenditure of households) are normalized to GDP. • Exchange rate RON/EUR is expressed as units of domestic currency per unit of foreign currency. Choosing the “fundamentals” The stationarity of the determinants factors was checked. • Productivity differential – stationary (not included) • Final Government consumption expenditure – stationary (not included) • Real interest rate differential – stationary (not included)

  6. ADF and PP unit root tests ADF and PP unit root tests on fundamentals Choosing the VAR length VAR stability

  7. Johansen Cointegration Test and Vector Error Correction Estimates The Johansen Cointegration Test demonstrates that there are only one cointegration relations between the variables included in the test – the null hypothesis of the existence of at most one cointegration relation cannot be rejected at the 5% significance level.

  8. The fundamentals The long-run equilibrium of the determinants was captured using the Hodrick-Prescott filter.

  9. After adjusting the cointegration vector with respect to real exchange rate, the following expression is obtained: • All the coefficients are statistically significant. • The increase of the terms of trade is translated into an appreciation of the real exchange rate. • The degree of openness is positively related wit real exchange rate – an increase of openness determines the depreciation of domestic currency. • A hike of final consumption expenditures of households appreciates the domestic currency. • The RERM are calculated according to the formula:

  10. Table 6 – real exchange rate misalignments Table 5 - real exchange rate (RER) and equilibrium exchange rate (REER) • Periods of overvaluation: 2000 – 2002, middle of 2004 – first quarter of 2008 • Periods of undervaluation: 2002 – middle of 2004, first quarter of 2008 – last quarter of 2009 • The positive values (values above the red line) represent overvaluation.

  11. Measures of competitiveness • Real exchange rate • An increase of the RER (a depreciation) is associated with an improvement of a nation’s competitiveness, as the domestic product prices expressed in foreign currency decrease; • On the other hand, a decrease of the RER (an appreciation) may not necessarily imply that domestic competitiveness worsened. It may reflect a convergence process. • Export growth and market share Drawbacks: • International trade is not a zero-sum game; • The exports could be increased through devaluation and keeping wages at low levels (Porter, 1990). • Current account balance (criticized by Krygman, 1994): • Prior posting large trade deficits, many countries have run trade surplus in order to regain investors’ confidence (case of Mexico in the early 90s); • Production cost (cost of labour, with the well known ULC); • Global Competitiveness Index

  12. Merchandise export and ULC growth • The ULC has decreased constantly since 2000, pointing towards an improvement of domestic competitiveness. • On the other hand, the merchandise exports share in GDP remained stable during this period at approximately 26% of GDP.

  13. Choosing the VAR length VAR estimates The VAR stability The variables included are merchandise exports deviations and the real exchange rate misalignments. The VAR length is 1 lag and the stability condition is fulfilled.

  14. Impulse-response function and forecast variance decompositions - important ways of assessing the relative importance of a shock in real exchange rate in accounting for variation in trade competitiveness at various time horizons. The impulse-response function of exports merchandise deviations to shock in real exchange rate misalignments The impulse-response function shows that a positive shock in real exchange rate misalignments, perceived as an appreciation process induces an increase of merchandise exports deviations (translated into a fall of merchandise exports). A maximum 1.8% impact of real exchange rate misalignments on merchandise exports deviations is recorded on short-run (up to 4 quarters). Also, the impact is significant on short-run. On medium and long-run the impact is decaying away, but the result is not statistically significant.

  15. Variance of merchandise export deviations due to RER misalignments (%) The real exchange rate misalignments appear to be responsible for 40% of merchandise exports’ variance on long-run.Even if considered with the short-run significance of the impulse-response, the real exchange rate misalignments determine around 20% of the variance of the merchandise exports deviations.

  16. I have encountered some special issues related to ULC. • Even if the results obtained running the VAR approach were inconclusive, if a Johansen cointegration were run, a cointegration relation between the variables included would results. The ULC deviations have no unit root The Johansen cointegration test between ULC deviations and real exchange rate misalignments

  17. The impulse-response function of the cointegrated VAR The shock on real exchange rate misalignments and the ULC deviations’ response confirm the results obtained earlier: a positive shock in real exchange rate misalignments (an appreciation) determines a fall of ULC deviations (perceived as a decrease of ULC and improvement of competitiveness).

  18. Concluding remarks • The signs of the determinants are in line with economic theory and the coefficients are statistically significant. • In the covered period, the real exchange rate was well misaligned compared to its long-run value. • The real exchange rate was misaligned by 4% during 2009. • Competitiveness is positively related to a depreciation currency. • The exports should not be encouraged through currency depreciation. Increasing productivity and quality, becoming more competitive through prices and costs is a more appropriate strategy. It could also serve as the fundament for a sustained economic development. • The real exchange rate should stay as close as possible to its equilibrium level in order to avoid the economic distortions.

  19. References • Aguirrea, A. and C. Calderón (2006), “The Real Exchange Rate Misalignments and Economic Performance”, Central Bank of Chile, Working Paper No.315, April • Astaha, S.G. and SN. Huda (2002), ”Exchange Rate Misalignment and International Trade Competitiveness: A Cointegration Analysis for South Africa”, 2002 Annual Forum, Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies • Boltho, A. (1996), “The Assessment: International Competitiveness”, Oxford Review Of Economic Policy, Vol. 12, No.3 • Driver, R. L. and P. F. Westaway (2004), “Concepts of Equilibrium Exchange Rates”, Bank of England, Working Paper No.248 • Dumitru, I. (2006), “The Equilibrium Exchange Rate in Romania”, MPRA Paper No.10631, posted 19 • Edwards, S. (1987), “Exchange Rate Misalignments in Developing Countries”, NBER Working Paper, No.442 • Égert, B. and K. Lommatzsch (2004), “Equilibrium Exchange Rates in the Transition: The Tradable Price-Based Real Appreciation and Estimation Uncertainty”, William Davidson Institute, Working Paper No.676, April • Égert, B. (2005), “Equilibrium Exchange Rates in South Eastern Europe, Russia, Ukraine and Turkey: Healthy or (Dutch) diseased?”, Economic Systems, No.29 pp. 205–241 • Fukunishi, T. (2005), “International Competitiveness of Manufacturing Firms in Sub-Saharan Africa”, Institute of Developing Economies, Discussion Paper No.2 • Grant, R. M. (1991), “Porters’s Competitive Advantage of Nations’: An Assessment”, Strategic Management Journal, Vol. 12, pp. 535-548 • Harberger, A. C. (2004), “The Real Exchange Rate: Issues of Concept and Measurement”, Paper Prepared for a Conference In Honor Of Michael Mussa • Hodrick, R. J. and E. C. Prescott (1997), “Postwar U.S. Business Cycles: An Empirical Investigation”, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Vol. 29, No. 1, pp. 1-16 • Kemme, D. and M. R Saktinil (2006), “Real Exchange Rate Misalignment: Prelude to Crisis?”, Economic Systems, No. 30, pp. 207–230

  20. Kipici, A. N. and M. Kesriyeli (1997), “The Real Exchange Rate Definitions and Calculations”, Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, Research Department, Publication No.97/1 • Krugman, P. (1994), “Competitiveness - A Dangerous Obsession”, Foreign Affairs, vol. 73, No.2 • MacDonald, R. (2000), “Concepts to Calculate Equilibrium Exchange Rates: An Overview”, Economic Research Group of the Deutsche Bundesbank, Discussion Paper 3/00 • Moise, A., L.L. Albu, I. Dumitru, and C. Necula (2006), “Estimation of Equilibrium Real Exchange Rate and of Deviations for Romania”, Study within the CEEX Programme – Project No.220 • Rano, S. U. (2007), “Real Exchange Rate Misalignment: An Application of Behavioral Equilibrium Exchange Rate (BEER) to Nigeria”, MPRA Paper No. 10376, posted 09, September • Reinhart, C. and G. Kaminsky (1999), “The Twin Crises: The Causes of Banking and Balance of Payments Problems”, MPRA Paper No.14081, posted 14 • Rogoff, K. (1996), “The Purchasing Power Puzzle”, Journal of Economic Literature, Vol. XXXIV, pp. 647-668 • Sekkat, K. and A. Varoudakis (1998), “Exchange-Rate Management and Manufactured Exports in Sub-Saharan Africa”, OECD Development Centre, Working Paper No.134, March • Siggel, E. (2007), “International Competitiveness and Comparative Advantage: A Survey and a Proposal for Measurement”, CESifo Venice Summer Institute 2007 • Stein, J. L. and G. Paladino (1999), “Exchange Rate Misalignments and Crises”, CESifo Working Paper Series, Working Paper No.205, November • Terra, C. and F. Valladares (2010), “Real Exchange Rate Misalignments”, International Review of Economics and Finance, No.19, pp 199-144 • World Economic Forum, Global Competitiveness Report 2009 – 2010, Geneva, 2009 • Zanakis, S. H. and I. Becerra-Fernandez (2004), “Competitiveness of Nations: A Knowledge Discovery Examination”, European Journal of Operational Research, No. 166, pp. 185–211

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