Exchange rate volatility and UK imports from developing countries: the effect of the global financial crisis
Exchange rate volatility and UK imports from developing countries: the effect of the global financial crisis
This paper studies the role of exchange rate volatility in determining the UK's real imports from three major developing countries – Brazil, China, and South Africa. The paper contributes to the literature by investigating the third country effect and also by analyzing the impact of the current financial crisis on the relationship between exchange rate volatility and UK imports. This paper further expands the empirical literature on the subject by offering evidence based on the asymmetric autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) method from the application of monthly data from January 1991 to December 2011. Results suggest that exchange rate volatility plays an important role in determination of trade and also reveal a significant effect of the recent financial crisis on UK imports. This finding remains consistent when we test for the third country volatility effect. We also find that there is a significant causal relationship between exchange rate volatility and UK imports. The third country effect is significant for all the countries investigated. These results have significant implications for the trade policy and international trade in minimizing the underlying risk factors and ensuring stable trade flows in different economic scenarios.
real imports, exchange rate volatility, asymmetric cointegration, financial crisis
89-101
Choudhry, Taufiq
6fc3ceb8-8103-4017-b3b5-2d38efa57728
Hassan, Syed S.
56dcdf0d-bb8e-494b-8ed6-380d2177bb65
1 November 2015
Choudhry, Taufiq
6fc3ceb8-8103-4017-b3b5-2d38efa57728
Hassan, Syed S.
56dcdf0d-bb8e-494b-8ed6-380d2177bb65
Choudhry, Taufiq and Hassan, Syed S.
(2015)
Exchange rate volatility and UK imports from developing countries: the effect of the global financial crisis.
Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money, 39, .
(doi:10.1016/j.intfin.2015.07.004).
Abstract
This paper studies the role of exchange rate volatility in determining the UK's real imports from three major developing countries – Brazil, China, and South Africa. The paper contributes to the literature by investigating the third country effect and also by analyzing the impact of the current financial crisis on the relationship between exchange rate volatility and UK imports. This paper further expands the empirical literature on the subject by offering evidence based on the asymmetric autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) method from the application of monthly data from January 1991 to December 2011. Results suggest that exchange rate volatility plays an important role in determination of trade and also reveal a significant effect of the recent financial crisis on UK imports. This finding remains consistent when we test for the third country volatility effect. We also find that there is a significant causal relationship between exchange rate volatility and UK imports. The third country effect is significant for all the countries investigated. These results have significant implications for the trade policy and international trade in minimizing the underlying risk factors and ensuring stable trade flows in different economic scenarios.
Text
Choudhry_Exchange.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 July 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 July 2015
Published date: 1 November 2015
Keywords:
real imports, exchange rate volatility, asymmetric cointegration, financial crisis
Organisations:
Southampton Business School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 382852
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382852
ISSN: 1042-4431
PURE UUID: 40c2923b-d56e-4547-aad5-5b783b3ad556
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Date deposited: 21 Oct 2015 12:52
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:06
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Author:
Syed S. Hassan
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