Search results for "Reserve currency"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Substituting a Substitute Currency – The Case of Estonia

2002

This study evaluates substitution of foreign currency balances in Estonia, a transition economy neighbouring countries participating in EMU. The focus is on substitution between dollar and euro balances in the three basic functions of money - unit of account, store of value and means of payment. While traditional models for currency substitution concentrate on substitution between a domestic currency and aggregate foreign currency balances, we look for substitution between the dollar and the euro or euro-related foreign currency balances. We find substitution between dollarization and euroization to be asymmetric in the short run, which suggests that inertia, irreversibility and ratchet eff…

Currency substitutionDevaluationjel:F31Monetary economicsjel:E41Unit of accounteuro dollar currency substitution currency demandjel:G11CurrencyStore of valueReserve currencyeuro; dollar; currency substitution; currency demandLiberian dollarEconomicsForeign exchange risk
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Substituting a substitute currency

2008

Abstract This study evaluates the dynamics between the dollar and euro balances in the Estonian economy. The focus is to apply the traditional currency substitution model to the substitution of the substitute currency, the dollar and euro-related foreign currency balances. We find substitution between the dollar and the euro to be asymmetric in the short run. Inertia, irreversibility and ratchet effects favoured the use of the euro as a substitute currency. No significant evidence of asymmetries in the long run was detected. However, in general, a traditional model for currency substitution was capable of explaining the dynamics of the euro and the dollar as substitute foreign currencies.

Economics and EconometricsCurrency substitutionShort runReserve currencyCurrencySubstitution (logic)EconomicsDevaluationLiberian dollarMonetary economicsForeign exchange riskFinanceInternational Review of Economics & Finance
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The Economics of Monetary Union: The Theory of Optimum Currency Areas

2013

In the 1960s, the theory of Optimum Currency Areas (OCAs) emerged as a by-product of the theoretical debate between fixed and flexible exchange rates. The OCAs approach singles out an economic characteristic to define an economic domain where there is exchange rate fixity erga intra, while there is exchange rate flexibility erga extra. In an optimum currency area, exchange rates fixity prevails internally without any type of internal or external disequilibrium. Each single characteristic ensures that floating or regular adjustments in nominal exchange rates are neither necessary, efficient nor desirable for stabilisation purposes. The literature proposes several economic criteria: factor mo…

Exchange rateCurrencyReserve currencyDevaluationEconomicsOptimum currency areaMonetary economicsExchange-rate flexibilityMonetary hegemonyMonetary base
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Determining the RMB Exchange Regime

2011

Although China has claimed since 2005 that it will move towards a more market-oriented system of managing its foreign exchange, it has remained, in part, a managed economic system. This chapter examines the relative importance of fundamentalist, chartist and currency arrangements in determining the RMB exchange regime using both traditional linear and non-linear artificial intelligence models. We find that the emphasis on the US dollar as a reference currency has declined. Fundamentalist forces are becoming strong determinants of the currency exchange. The genetic programming approach is among the best performing in minimizing forecasting error.

Foreign exchange swapCurrencyReserve currencyRenminbiDevaluationBusinessInternational economicsMonetary economicsForeign exchange riskChinaForeign exchange market
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Estimating the Effect of Common Currencies on Trade: Blooming or Withering Roses?

2013

Abstract Using a gravity model and data on 182 countries worldwide, this paper estimates the effects of exchange rate volatility and currency unions on international trade for ten years spanning 1980 through 2010. We provide added confirmation and further strengthen the empirical findings in Rose (2000) prior to 1999, but we find a gradually diminishing Rose effect for the 2000-2010 period, when the Euro Zone is added to the currency union dummy. The rest of the coefficients generally comply in magnitude and sign with what is standard in the “gravity” literature. Our findings support a much stronger effect of a currency union on trade than the hypothetical effect of reducing exchange rate v…

Gravity modelGeneral EngineeringEnergy Engineering and Power TechnologyInternational economicsRose effectCurrency unionReserve currencyGravity model of tradeCurrencyExchange rate volatilityRest (finance)Monetary unionEconomicsTradeCommon currencyForeign exchange riskCommon currencyProcedia Economics and Finance
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Regional currencies and regional monetary zones in Latin America: what prospects?

2009

Reducing transaction costs and the need for international reserves is a primary objective to the establishment of regional payment agreements. Another objective, especially in the case of Latin America where the Ecuadorian promoters of the Bank of the South (Banco del Sur) and the New Regional Financial Architecture are planning the implementation of a regional clearing system, is to reduce member countries' dependence on the U. S. dollar as an international standard and reserve currency. To help improve the design of such agreements, this paper refers to the plan Keynes designed for the Bretton Woods conference. First, it observes that cases were made against this plan from which useful le…

Transaction costCurrency unionEconomics and EconometricsLatin AmericansReserve currencyCurrencyInternational standardEconomicsLiberian dollarClearingInternational economicsJournal of Post Keynesian Economics
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