Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member States

Due to negotiations on accession to the EU, the new EU member states from Central and Eastern Europe went through the financial opening. In the pre-crisis period followed by high liquidity in global markets, most of the EU new member states experienced rapid credit growth, which conditioned the appr...

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Main Authors: Zoričić Zdenka Obuljen, Cota Boris, Erjavec Nataša
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-05-01
Series:Zagreb International Review of Economics and Business
Subjects:
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f32
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/zireb-2020-0009
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spelling doaj-64b561836ac14b99b246a852a0af137a2021-09-05T21:25:41ZengSciendoZagreb International Review of Economics and Business1849-11622020-05-0123114115410.2478/zireb-2020-0009zireb-2020-0009Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member StatesZoričić Zdenka Obuljen0Cota Boris1Erjavec Nataša2University of Dubrovnik,Dubrovnik, Croatia.Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia.Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia.Due to negotiations on accession to the EU, the new EU member states from Central and Eastern Europe went through the financial opening. In the pre-crisis period followed by high liquidity in global markets, most of the EU new member states experienced rapid credit growth, which conditioned the appreciation of the exchange rate. External imbalances and vulnerabilities built up. Countries experienced deterioration in their current accounts. This paper investigates the link between financial openness, real effective exchange rate, financial crisis and current account balance within the Panel Auto-Regressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) framework for 11 new European Union members during the period from 1999 to 2016. The results obtained by the use of pooled mean group estimator (PMG) show that in the long run, financial openness has a significant negative impact on the current account balance. In the short run, crisis significantly influences the current account balance having a positive sign.https://doi.org/10.2478/zireb-2020-0009european unioncurrent account balancefinancial opennessreal effective exchange ratepooled mean group estimatorc33f32f41
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zoričić Zdenka Obuljen
Cota Boris
Erjavec Nataša
spellingShingle Zoričić Zdenka Obuljen
Cota Boris
Erjavec Nataša
Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member States
Zagreb International Review of Economics and Business
european union
current account balance
financial openness
real effective exchange rate
pooled mean group estimator
c33
f32
f41
author_facet Zoričić Zdenka Obuljen
Cota Boris
Erjavec Nataša
author_sort Zoričić Zdenka Obuljen
title Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member States
title_short Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member States
title_full Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member States
title_fullStr Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member States
title_full_unstemmed Financial Liberalization and Current Account Developments in New EU Member States
title_sort financial liberalization and current account developments in new eu member states
publisher Sciendo
series Zagreb International Review of Economics and Business
issn 1849-1162
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Due to negotiations on accession to the EU, the new EU member states from Central and Eastern Europe went through the financial opening. In the pre-crisis period followed by high liquidity in global markets, most of the EU new member states experienced rapid credit growth, which conditioned the appreciation of the exchange rate. External imbalances and vulnerabilities built up. Countries experienced deterioration in their current accounts. This paper investigates the link between financial openness, real effective exchange rate, financial crisis and current account balance within the Panel Auto-Regressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) framework for 11 new European Union members during the period from 1999 to 2016. The results obtained by the use of pooled mean group estimator (PMG) show that in the long run, financial openness has a significant negative impact on the current account balance. In the short run, crisis significantly influences the current account balance having a positive sign.
topic european union
current account balance
financial openness
real effective exchange rate
pooled mean group estimator
c33
f32
f41
url https://doi.org/10.2478/zireb-2020-0009
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