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Currency Wars? Unconventional Monetary Policy Does Not Stimulate Exports

Andrew Rose

Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 2021, vol. 53, issue 5, 1079-1096

Abstract: I investigate whether countries that use unconventional monetary policy (UMP) experience export booms. I use a popular gravity model of trade which requires neither the exogeneity of UMP, nor instrumental variables for UMP. In practice, countries that engage in UMP experience a drop in exports vis‐à‐vis countries that are not engaged in such policies, holding other things constant. Quantitative easing is associated with exports that are about 10% lower to countries not engaged in UMP; this amount is significantly different from zero and similar to the effect of negative nominal interest rates. Thus, there is no evidence that countries have gained export markets through UMP; currency wars that have been launched have also been lost. UMP is also associated with a comparable drop in imports and exchange rates, suggesting that countries engage in UMP when they are experiencing adverse macroeconomic shocks concurrent with those that eviscerate international trade.

Date: 2021
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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https://doi.org/10.1111/jmcb.12815

Related works:
Working Paper: Currency Wars? Unconventional Monetary Policy Does Not Stimulate Exports (2018) Downloads
Working Paper: Currency Wars? Unconventional Monetary Policy Does Not Stimulate Exports (2017) Downloads
Working Paper: Currency Wars? Unconventional Monetary Policy Does Not Stimulate Exports (2017) Downloads
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