Exchange Rates in Central Europe : A Blessing or a Curse?

Central European accession countries (CECs) are currently considering when to adopt the euro. From the perspective of macroeconomic stabilization, the cost or benefit of giving up a flexible exchange rate depends on the types of asymmetric shocks hitting the economy and the ability of the exchange rate to act as a shock absorber. Economic theory suggests that flexible exchange rates are useful in absorbing asymmetric real shocks but unhelpful in the case of monetary and financial shocks. For five CECs-the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, the Slovak Republic, and Slovenia-empirical results on the basis of a structural VAR suggest that in the CECs the exchange rate appears to have served as much or more as an unhelpful propagator of monetary and financial shocks than as a useful absorber of real shocks.
Publication date: January 2004
ISBN: 9781451841794
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Finance , Finance , Money and Monetary Policy , Money and Monetary Policy , structural VAR , accession , CECs , exchange rate , nominal exchange rate , real exchange rate , flexible exchange rates , Multiple or Simultaneous Equation Models: Time-Series Models , International Monetary Arrangements and Institutions , Slovakia , transition

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