This paper examines the question of whether a country's exchange rate policy choices are influenced by membership in preferential trade agreements (PTAs). We argue that PTAs, by constraining a government's ability to employ trade protection, increase its incentives to maintain monetary and fiscal autonomy in order to manipulate the domestic political economy. Consequently, we contend that countries are less likely to adopt or sustain a fixed exchange rate when they have signed a PTA with their “base” country—the country to whom they have traditionally fixed the currency or the major industrial country to whom they have the most extensive trade ties. Likewise, countries that have signed a “base” PTA also tend to have more depreciated/underva...
The literature has identified at least five approaches to the determinants of the choice of exchange...
From the end of World War II until 1971, exchange-rate practices were governed by the Bretton Woods ...
Issues surrounding exchange rates continue to fascinate both economists and political scientists. Al...
This paper examines the question of whether governments engage in "exchange rate protection" - that ...
The relationship between exchange rates and trade has long been controversial. The fixed exchange ra...
Recent scholarship on exchange rate regime choice seeks to explain why some countries fix their exch...
This paper examines the impact of exchange rate regimes on bilateral trade while differentiating the...
Recent scholarship on exchange rate regime choice seeks to explain why some countries fix their exch...
Most models of monetary coordination overlook two important aspects of exchange rate regimes in deve...
This paper examines the relationship between fixed exchange rate arrangements and trade using a grav...
ABSTRACT Preferential trading agreements (PTAs) are proliferating rapidly. By 2006, according to the...
I analyze how representative institutions affect policymaker preferences over the level of the domes...
We show that political economy factors play an important role in shaping the exchange rate policies ...
If governments choose economic policies that often run counter to their public commitments, are thos...
Issues surrounding exchange rates continue to fascinate both economists and political scientists. Al...
The literature has identified at least five approaches to the determinants of the choice of exchange...
From the end of World War II until 1971, exchange-rate practices were governed by the Bretton Woods ...
Issues surrounding exchange rates continue to fascinate both economists and political scientists. Al...
This paper examines the question of whether governments engage in "exchange rate protection" - that ...
The relationship between exchange rates and trade has long been controversial. The fixed exchange ra...
Recent scholarship on exchange rate regime choice seeks to explain why some countries fix their exch...
This paper examines the impact of exchange rate regimes on bilateral trade while differentiating the...
Recent scholarship on exchange rate regime choice seeks to explain why some countries fix their exch...
Most models of monetary coordination overlook two important aspects of exchange rate regimes in deve...
This paper examines the relationship between fixed exchange rate arrangements and trade using a grav...
ABSTRACT Preferential trading agreements (PTAs) are proliferating rapidly. By 2006, according to the...
I analyze how representative institutions affect policymaker preferences over the level of the domes...
We show that political economy factors play an important role in shaping the exchange rate policies ...
If governments choose economic policies that often run counter to their public commitments, are thos...
Issues surrounding exchange rates continue to fascinate both economists and political scientists. Al...
The literature has identified at least five approaches to the determinants of the choice of exchange...
From the end of World War II until 1971, exchange-rate practices were governed by the Bretton Woods ...
Issues surrounding exchange rates continue to fascinate both economists and political scientists. Al...