Do Multilateral Trade Linkages Explain Bilateral Real Exchange Rate Volatility?
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Bravo Ortega, Claudio
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Do Multilateral Trade Linkages Explain Bilateral Real Exchange Rate Volatility?
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Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of multilateral trade linkages on bilateral real exchange
rate volatility by examining a particular channel —the extent of the effects of differences on
import intensities (GDP’s share of imports of a given product and origin) between trade partners—of
long-run real exchange rate volatility. I exploit a large panel of cross-country data over
the years 1970–97 and construct a micro-founded index to capture this effect. In the estimations
I address carefully endogeneity issues by testing not just exogeneity but also the presence
of weak instruments. As robustness check and under the latter I estimate LIML and Fuller(1)
regressions to ensure unbiased coefficients. Results strongly support the hypothesis that a pair
of countries with a larger difference in the import intensities from the rest of the world faces a
larger bilateral real exchange rate volatility. This result turns to be robust to the inclusion of
bilateral trade a commonly argued moderator of volatility and other controls. These empirical
findings are consistent with recent international trade models that highlight multi-country trade
linkages.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143690
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Serie Documentos de Trabajo Vol. 377, pp. 1 - 34, Febrero, 2013
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