Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test Approach

This paper tests the mean reverting property of current account in the financial crisis-affected 5 counties of southeast Asia using nonlinear unit root tests of Park and shintani(2004). Our approach is based on the idea that a conventional unit root test has lower power in detecting the nonlinear me...

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Main Author: Bonghan Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Institute for International Economic Policy 2005-12-01
Series:East Asian Economic Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2005.9.2.149
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spelling doaj-4264b7362fa148f28ba49265b7240f5e2020-11-24T23:40:41ZengKorea Institute for International Economic PolicyEast Asian Economic Review2508-16402508-16672005-12-0192213238http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2005.9.2.149Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test ApproachBonghan Kim 0Kongju National UniversityThis paper tests the mean reverting property of current account in the financial crisis-affected 5 counties of southeast Asia using nonlinear unit root tests of Park and shintani(2004). Our approach is based on the idea that a conventional unit root test has lower power in detecting the nonlinear mean reverting behavior if the current account follows a nonlinear mean reversion process. We obtained following empirical results. First, for the pre-crisis period (1981Q1-1996Q4), the current accounts of Indonesia, Malaysia and Philippines are mean-reverting but those of Korea and Thailand are not mean-reverting. Second, for the full sample period (1981Q1-2003Q4), the ADF test fails to reject the unit root of the current account in all countries except Philippines. However, unit root is rejected in favor of nonlinear mean reversion except Thailand. This nonlinear unit root test result implies that crisis-affected Asian countries except Thailand have sustainable paths of current accounts. Third, when the current accounts of East Asian countries are nonlinear mean-reverting, the mean reverting process can be well described by the ESTAR model, instead of the DTAR or DLSTAR model. The nonlinear unit root test results imply smooth nonlinear mean-reversion behaviors of East Asian current accounts. Finally, the shape of estimated impulse response functions becomes steeper as the size of shock increases, which is the very characteristic of the nonlinear process. http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2005.9.2.149Current AccountSolvencyNonlinear Unit Root TestAsian Economies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bonghan Kim
spellingShingle Bonghan Kim
Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test Approach
East Asian Economic Review
Current Account
Solvency
Nonlinear Unit Root Test
Asian Economies
author_facet Bonghan Kim
author_sort Bonghan Kim
title Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test Approach
title_short Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test Approach
title_full Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test Approach
title_fullStr Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test Approach
title_full_unstemmed Are Current Accounts of Asian Economies Mean-reverting?: Nonlinear Unit Root Test Approach
title_sort are current accounts of asian economies mean-reverting?: nonlinear unit root test approach
publisher Korea Institute for International Economic Policy
series East Asian Economic Review
issn 2508-1640
2508-1667
publishDate 2005-12-01
description This paper tests the mean reverting property of current account in the financial crisis-affected 5 counties of southeast Asia using nonlinear unit root tests of Park and shintani(2004). Our approach is based on the idea that a conventional unit root test has lower power in detecting the nonlinear mean reverting behavior if the current account follows a nonlinear mean reversion process. We obtained following empirical results. First, for the pre-crisis period (1981Q1-1996Q4), the current accounts of Indonesia, Malaysia and Philippines are mean-reverting but those of Korea and Thailand are not mean-reverting. Second, for the full sample period (1981Q1-2003Q4), the ADF test fails to reject the unit root of the current account in all countries except Philippines. However, unit root is rejected in favor of nonlinear mean reversion except Thailand. This nonlinear unit root test result implies that crisis-affected Asian countries except Thailand have sustainable paths of current accounts. Third, when the current accounts of East Asian countries are nonlinear mean-reverting, the mean reverting process can be well described by the ESTAR model, instead of the DTAR or DLSTAR model. The nonlinear unit root test results imply smooth nonlinear mean-reversion behaviors of East Asian current accounts. Finally, the shape of estimated impulse response functions becomes steeper as the size of shock increases, which is the very characteristic of the nonlinear process.
topic Current Account
Solvency
Nonlinear Unit Root Test
Asian Economies
url http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2005.9.2.149
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