The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China

碩士 === 國立政治大學 === 經濟研究所 === 96 === China has been in a state that the currency appreciation is needed to restore the external balance. However, it appears that Chinese government worries about that the Renminbi appreciation may decrease the output. This purpose of this paper is to empirically invest...

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Main Author: 邱芳鉁
Other Authors: 朱美麗
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2005
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/13248887801122430594
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spelling ndltd-TW-096NCCU53890062015-10-13T11:31:58Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/13248887801122430594 The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China 開發中國家實質匯率研究:以中國為例 邱芳鉁 碩士 國立政治大學 經濟研究所 96 China has been in a state that the currency appreciation is needed to restore the external balance. However, it appears that Chinese government worries about that the Renminbi appreciation may decrease the output. This purpose of this paper is to empirically investigate whether the contractionary hypothesis prevailing in developing countries holds for China with quarterly data over the period from 1995Q1 to 2006Q2. We apply VAR models by means of impulse response functions and variance decompositions. The empirical evidences indicate that even taking the spurious correlation into account, the real appreciation of Renminbi leads to a fall in China’s output. Thus, our findings do not support the contractionary devaluation hypothesis. Moreover, the impact of the exchange rate on output is not through the inflation rate. In the short run, real exchange rate shocks have much power in explaining the output’s variation while the U.S interest rate and government spending shocks are determinants to the variation in output in the long run. Particularly, the monetary policy has relatively weak effect on the output and the real exchange rate. 朱美麗 2005 學位論文 ; thesis 21 en_US
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description 碩士 === 國立政治大學 === 經濟研究所 === 96 === China has been in a state that the currency appreciation is needed to restore the external balance. However, it appears that Chinese government worries about that the Renminbi appreciation may decrease the output. This purpose of this paper is to empirically investigate whether the contractionary hypothesis prevailing in developing countries holds for China with quarterly data over the period from 1995Q1 to 2006Q2. We apply VAR models by means of impulse response functions and variance decompositions. The empirical evidences indicate that even taking the spurious correlation into account, the real appreciation of Renminbi leads to a fall in China’s output. Thus, our findings do not support the contractionary devaluation hypothesis. Moreover, the impact of the exchange rate on output is not through the inflation rate. In the short run, real exchange rate shocks have much power in explaining the output’s variation while the U.S interest rate and government spending shocks are determinants to the variation in output in the long run. Particularly, the monetary policy has relatively weak effect on the output and the real exchange rate.
author2 朱美麗
author_facet 朱美麗
邱芳鉁
author 邱芳鉁
spellingShingle 邱芳鉁
The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China
author_sort 邱芳鉁
title The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China
title_short The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China
title_full The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China
title_fullStr The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China
title_full_unstemmed The Real Exchange Rate in Developing Countries: A Study on China
title_sort real exchange rate in developing countries: a study on china
publishDate 2005
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/13248887801122430594
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