Real Exchange Rates In Developing Countries : Are Balassa-Samuelson Effects Present? /
There is little empirical research on whether Balassa-Samuelson effects can explain the long-run behavior of real exchange rates in developing countries. This paper presents new evidence on this issue based on a panel data sample of 16 developing countries. The paper finds that the traded-nontraded...
| Auteur principal: | Khan, Mohsin |
|---|---|
| Autres auteurs: | Choudhri, Ehsan |
| Format: | Revue |
| Langue: | English |
| Publié: |
Washington, D.C. :
International Monetary Fund,
2004.
|
| Collection: | IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;
No. 2004/188 |
| Accès en ligne: | Full text available on IMF |
Documents similaires
-
Labor Productivity and Real Exchange Rate : The Balassa-Samuelson Disconnect in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia /
par: Loko, Boileau
Publié: (2005) -
Response of the Equilibrium Real Exchange Rate to Real Disturbances in Developing Countries /
par: Khan, Mohsin
Publié: (1991) -
Macroeconomic Implications of Real Exchange Rate Targeting in Developing Countries /
par: Montiel, Peter
Publié: (1991) -
Interpreting Real Exchange Rate Movements in Transition Countries.
Publié: (2001) -
Capital Flows, Exchange Rate Flexibility, and the Real Exchange Rate /
par: Combes, Jean-Louis
Publié: (2011)