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On the impact of kuna exchange rate on Croatian foreign trade results: Elasticity approach Petar Sorić.

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Presentation on theme: "On the impact of kuna exchange rate on Croatian foreign trade results: Elasticity approach Petar Sorić."— Presentation transcript:

1 On the impact of kuna exchange rate on Croatian foreign trade results: Elasticity approach Petar Sorić

2 Presentation structure Motivation and subject of research Data & econometric methods Theoretical background Related literature review Empirical models Econometric results and their implications Concluding remarks

3 Motivation and subject of research Permanently unfavourable Croatian foreign trade results The myth of overvaluated kuna exchange rate Need of more detailed foreign trade exploring

4 Motivation and subject of research TB reaches it’s low point in 1997, Q4; stagnation from 2002 rer’s follow the tb trend line until 2003, when they diverge Series means are adjusted in order to fit on the graph

5 Data & econometric methods Quarterly data, 1996Q1 to 2007Q4, seasonally adjusted and in logarithms otb=ln(X)-ln(IM) orer data obtained by correcting nominal exchange rate for the ratio of foreign and domestic price level (CPI) orer increase=appreciation Johansen’s approach used in order to obtain both the short run (VECM) and the long run elasticity coefficients (cointegration vector) J-curve analysis

6 Theoretical background Marshall-Lerner condition J-curve

7 Related literature review Turkalj (2005): small (but expected) estimated imports and exports exchange rate elasticities (OLS) Mervar (2003): income effect dominates over the exchange rate impact (PSS) Stu č ka (2003): Existence of the J-curve, estimated long-run rer coefficient of 0.9-1.3% (ARDL, PSS, Bewley ARDL)  Analysis results differ with respect to the used method

8 Empirical models “Catch all” model tb = f(gdp_cro, gdp_de, gdp_aut, gdp_ita, rer_de, rer_aut, rer_ita) Three disaggregated models (CRO vs.DE, CRO vs. ITA and CRO vs. AUT) tb = f(gdp_cro, gdp_de, rer_de) tb = f(gdp_cro, gdp_ita, rer_ita) tb = f(gdp_cro, gdp_aut, rer_aut)

9 rankeigenvalue tracep-value 00.86921274.180.000* 10.75404184.670.000* 20.65149122.960.001* 30.4956376.5770.052*** 40.3484846.4610.202 50.2723427.6100.263 60.1711813.6210.324 70.114695.36010.255 Source: Author's calculation Note: *denotes rejection of the null hypothesis of no cointegration at 1% significance level, ***denotes rejection at 10% significance level Results of Johansen's cointegration test “Catch all” model

10 The following restrictions were imposed: β tb =1 α rer_aut = α gdp_ita = α gdp_aut = α gdp_cro =0 β gdp_cro = -1; α rer_aut = α rer_de β gdp_aut =- β gdp_de Above mentioned restrictions were jointly accepted by a LR test (, p-value of 0.2670)

11 Econometric results and their implications tb t = -153.60 + gdp_cro t -2.88gdp_de t + 2.88gdp_aut t + 5.03 gdp_ita t + 6.63rer_de t + 8.399 rer_aut t -11.88 rer_ita t Unexpected gdp_de and gdp_cro sign: Croatian exports structure uncorrespondance to German imports demand rer_de and rer_aut coefficients: tb worsening as a long-run result of kuna depreciation (exports is often generated by imports in Croatia, e.g. shipbuilding)

12 VEC model variablecoefficientt-valuevariablecoefficientt-value Δtb t-1 0.4607900.898Δgdp_aut t-2 5.411581.89 Δtb t-2 -0.230929-0.468Δgdp_aut t-3 1.178470.409 Δtb t-3 0.1500000.346Δgdp_aut t-4 5.407801.83 Δtb t-4 -0.684785-1.62Δrer_de t-1 -12.9903-0.976 Δgdp_cro t-1 4.114792.35Δrer_de t-2 5.783250.452 Δgdp_cro t-2 -3.56807-1.51Δrer_de t-3 4.885990.411 Δgdp_cro t-3 -1.56398-1.03Δrer_de t-4 3.041970.204 Δgdp_cro t-4 -2.80733-2.22Δrer_ita t-1 10.42751.84 Δgdp_de t-1 -7.13117-1.18Δrer_ita t-2 0.4610340.121 Δgdp_de t-2 -1.15130-0.189Δrer_ita t-3 -2.634890.891 Δgdp_de t-3 5.857030.918Δrer_ita t-4 -4.88785-1.75 Δgdp_de t-4 0.06648820.0113Δrer_aut t-1 0.3975080.0324 Δgdp_ita t-1 -3.30309-0.659Δrer_aut t-2 -7.80636-0.666 Δgdp_ita t-2 9.454951.80Δrer_aut t-3 -0.628294-0.0569 Δgdp_ita t-3 -8.92433-1.33Δrer_aut t-4 0.6231530.0468 Δgdp_ita t-4 1.723590.413constant106.5681.78 Δgdp_aut t-1 -2.99187-1.22ECT t-1 -0.347350-1.78

13 test test statisticsp-value AR 1-1 test F(1,5) = 2.7624 0.1574 ARCH 1-1 test F(1,4) =0.0036441 0.9548 Normality test χ 2 (2) = 5.3125 0.0702 RESET test F(1,5) = 0.54866 0.4922 Properties of VECM residuals

14 Croatia vs. Germany rankeigenvalu e tracep-value 00.4806154.2340.010* 10.4002025.4100.152 20.0485632.91850.963 30.72814 0.393 Results of Johansen's cointegration test for CRO vs. DE model Source: Author's calculation Note: *denotes rejection of the null hypothesis of no cointegration at 1% significance level

15 tb t = -0.39gdp_cro t + 2.27 gdp_de t + 1.43rer_de t GDP coefficients confirm economic theory rer_de elasticity coefficient suggests tb deterioration in case of a devaluation  Uncompetitive economic structure  Import dependency of the Croatian economy

16 Croatia vs. Italy rankeigenvalue tracep-value 00.4591139.3420.250 10.1946212.3020.917 20.0611252.77840.969 37.099E-0050.003120.955 Source: Author's calculation Results of Johansen's cointegration test

17 Direction of causalityF-statisticProbability dgdp_cro → dtb0.317610.72985 dtb → dgdp_cro0.208640.81263 dgdp_ita → dtb0.005350.99467 dtb → dgdp_ita0.511840.60357 drer_ita → dtb1.730820.19117 dtb → drer_ita0.934910.40170 dgdp_ita → dgdp_cro0.170430.84396 dgdp_cro → dgdp_ita2.576280.08964 drer_ita → dgdp_cro0.429350.65413 dgdp_cro → drer_ita3.630600.03633 drer_ita → dgdp_ita0.434030.65115 dgdp_ita → drer_ita2.044700.14379 Granger causality test results  Relationship direction opposed to the expected?

18 Croatia vs. Austria rankeigenvaluetracep-value 00.4712348.1810.045* 10.3110920.1430.424 20.0738823.74730.916 30.00837670.370130.543 Results of Johansen's cointegration test for CRO vs. AUT model Source: Author's calculation Note: *denotes rejection of the null hypothesis of no cointegration at 1% significance level,

19 Confirmation of the CRO vs. DE model conclusions rer_aut coefficient opposed to economic theory tb t = -0.82gdp_cro t + 1.91gdp_aut t + 0.71 rer_aut t

20 Concluding remarks Marshall-Lerner condition & J-curve nonvalidity in Croatia? Real economic problems should primarily be solved by real variables and measures? Possible shortcomings: o short time span o the need of including other trade partners in the analysis Kuna devaluation effects should be observed much wider


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