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DETECTING SCAPEGOAT EFFECTS IN THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EXCHANGE RATES AND MACROECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS: A NEW APPROACH
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2018
Abstract
This paper presents a new testing method for the scapegoat model of exchange rates. A number of steps are implemented to determine whether macro-fundamentals are scapegoats for the evolution of exchange rates. Estimation is conducted using a Bayesian Gibbs sampling approach applied to eight countries (five developed and three emerging) versus the USA over the period 2002Q1–2014Q4. The macro-fundamentals that we consider are real GDP growth, the inflation rate, the long-run nominal interest rate, and the current account to GDP ratio. We calculate the posterior probabilities that these macro-fundamentals are scapegoats. For the inflation rate, these probabilities are considerably higher than the imposed prior probabilities of ½ in five out of eight countries (in particular, the Anglo-Saxon economies).
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- © Cambridge University Press 2018
Footnotes
For constructive comments and suggestions on earlier versions of this paper, we thank two anonymous referees, Tino Berger, Gerdie Everaert, Francesco Ravazzolo, Job Swank, and Sunčica Vujić. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors. No responsibility for them should be attributed to the Bank of Canada.
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