COINTEGRATION, FOREIGN exchange rates, ECONOMETRICS, MONEY, MONETARY policy, TIME series analysis, MONETARY unions, MONETARY systems, ECONOMICS
Abstract
In past research on the long-run behaviour of exchange rates the possibility of cointegration among spot rates has been rejected. This rejection is surprising as some exchange rates are bound by official agreements to comove over time. The European Monetary System (EMS) is an example of such an officially coordinating system. In this paper we extend past research by focusing on only EMS rates and use potentially more powerful cointegration tests to show that EMS rates are cointegrated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Horvath, Julius, Kandil, Magda, and Sharma, Subhash C.
Subjects
PRICE deflation, MONETARY policy, MONEY
Abstract
We analyse the disinflationary experience between 1979-93 for two traditionally inflationary countries of the European Monetary System: France and Italy. For each country, a vector autoregressive model is estimated. Shocks in the model combine domestic and foreign sources. The latter capture the world oil price shocks as well as nominal and real shocks originating in Germany. Under investigation is the hypothesis that shocks originating in Germany have a spillover disinflationary effect in France and Italy. The empirical evidence provides support to the validity of this hypothesis. Furthermore, German shocks account for an important share of the total price variance in France and Italy. These results indicate that the interaction between countries of the European Monetary System has contributed to the success of the disinflationary experiences of the 1980s. The evidence sheds, therefore, some light on potential benefits that may be further realized as countries of the European Monetary System move towards their objective of achieving a single currency under a united monetary system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]