Before and after the Asian crisis, the dollar has been the dominant anchor and reserve currency in East Asia. Due to underdeveloped capital markets and a very limited international role of the domestic currencies, the East Asian countries (except Japan) are likely to continue exchange rate stabilization and accumulation of international reserves. Yet expectations about a further depreciation of the dollar may trigger a broader orientation of exchange rate policies based on basket strategies. While the direction of trade suggests a substantial weight for the Japanese yen in East Asian countries' currency baskets, the role of the euro is enhanced by expectations about its long-term stability. (Rolling) econometric estimations of the basket st...
Before the 1997-98 crisis, the East Asian economies—except for Japan—informally pegged their currenc...
The process of European integration and especially the introduction of the euro as the single curren...
Deepening market-driven economic integration in East Asia makes intraregional exchange rate across t...
This paper examines the evolution of exchange rate arrangements in East Asia's emerging market econo...
This market commentary sketches the competition between the Euro and the US Dollar in the global cur...
East Asian countries, for example "ASEAN plus three countries" (China, Korea, and Japan), have been ...
Given the nature of East Asia’s economic structure, interregional exchange rate stability is an esse...
The effects of fluctuations in the yen/dollar exchange rate on the business cycle of the smaller Eas...
We examine the difference that various exchange rate arrangements can make toward stabilizing effect...
In the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis, the issue of the choice of exchange rate regime for ...
The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.comEver since the outbreak of the cur...
This paper studies the evolution of the exchange rate regime on East Asian economies between pre- an...
This paper examines whether or not Northeast Asia economies, namely, China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan...
This paper analyzes the ad hoc decision of three Asian countries to peg their currency to the U.S. d...
In this paper, I examine the extent to which the Asian exchange rates are coordinated around a synth...
Before the 1997-98 crisis, the East Asian economies—except for Japan—informally pegged their currenc...
The process of European integration and especially the introduction of the euro as the single curren...
Deepening market-driven economic integration in East Asia makes intraregional exchange rate across t...
This paper examines the evolution of exchange rate arrangements in East Asia's emerging market econo...
This market commentary sketches the competition between the Euro and the US Dollar in the global cur...
East Asian countries, for example "ASEAN plus three countries" (China, Korea, and Japan), have been ...
Given the nature of East Asia’s economic structure, interregional exchange rate stability is an esse...
The effects of fluctuations in the yen/dollar exchange rate on the business cycle of the smaller Eas...
We examine the difference that various exchange rate arrangements can make toward stabilizing effect...
In the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis, the issue of the choice of exchange rate regime for ...
The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.comEver since the outbreak of the cur...
This paper studies the evolution of the exchange rate regime on East Asian economies between pre- an...
This paper examines whether or not Northeast Asia economies, namely, China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan...
This paper analyzes the ad hoc decision of three Asian countries to peg their currency to the U.S. d...
In this paper, I examine the extent to which the Asian exchange rates are coordinated around a synth...
Before the 1997-98 crisis, the East Asian economies—except for Japan—informally pegged their currenc...
The process of European integration and especially the introduction of the euro as the single curren...
Deepening market-driven economic integration in East Asia makes intraregional exchange rate across t...