Floating versus fixed: How exchange rate regimes affect business cycles comovement between advanced and emerging economies

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Abstract

This article investigates the effects of the different exchange rate regimes on business cycles comovement between advanced and emerging countries. We use the Granger Causality test (VAR model) on panel data to examine the causal relationships. Our findings show the existence of a bidirectional causal relationship between output comovement and the exchange rate regimes. We check the robustness of our results by applying Dumitrescu-Hurlin (2012) panel causality test that confirms our findings. Furthermore, the impulse response functions illustrate that business cycles comovement between advanced and emerging economies responds positively and significantly to the exchange rate regimes of these two groups of countries in the short term. However, the positive effect begins to wane before being negative from the third quarter and the fifth quarter for emerging economies and developed economies, respectively.

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Elgahry, B. A. (2022). Floating versus fixed: How exchange rate regimes affect business cycles comovement between advanced and emerging economies. Cogent Economics and Finance. Cogent OA. https://doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2022.2116789

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