the conditional effect of interest groups on undervalued exchange rates david steinberg university...

13
The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

Post on 15-Jan-2016

228 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates

David SteinbergUniversity of Oregon

Page 2: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

The Puzzle

Undervalued Exchange Rates are Beneficial

– Increases economic growth (Dollar 1991; Rodrik 2008)

– Reduces unemployment (Frenkel & Ros 2006)

– Prevents financial crises (Reinhart & Rogoff 2009)

 

Exchange Rate Overvaluation (Median 2006)

All Developing Countries 3.4%Middle East & North Africa 18.1%Sub-Saharan Africa 7.9%

Latin America 7.9%Eastern Europe 25.9%

Asia -22.4%

…but Rare

Page 3: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

Overview

• Question: Why do (only) some developing countries maintain “undervalued” exchange rates?– Undervaluation defined: Domestic goods cheap relative to

foreign goods

• Theory: Conditional interest group approach– Manufacturing sector only promotes undervaluation when

state controls bank sector

• Empirics: Two tests– TSCS: Determinants of undervalued exchange rates– Survey: Determinants of exchange rate preferences

Page 4: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

Preferences

• Manufacturing Firms’ Preferences: Ambiguous– Benefit: External competitiveness – Cost: Cost imported inputs & foreign debt– Cost: Sterilized intervention interest rates

• Cost-reducing Compensations: Increase support for undervalued exchange rates– No compensations: Undervaluation increases both revenues &

expenses– Compensatory policies: Undervaluation increases revenues;

expenses do not increase

Page 5: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

State-Owned Banks

• State-Owned Banks: Reduce business costs– Targeted credit (i.e. “industrial policy”)– Forced placement of sterilization bills

• Hypothesis 1: state-owned banks, industry support undervaluation

Page 6: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

Conditional Effect of Interest Groups

• Hypothesis 2: Undervalued exchange rates are most likely in countries with large manufacturing sectors AND state-controlled financial systems

Page 7: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

Analysis I: Determinants of Undervalued Exchange Rates

• Sample: Developing countries, 1975-2006

• Dependent Variable: RER Overvaluation (Rodrik)– Overvaluation = RERit - RERPREDICTit

• Independent Variables– Manufacturing: Manufacturing/GDP (WDI)– State-owned banks: 4-category ordinal var. (Abiad et al)– Interaction Term: Manufacturing State-Owned Banks

• Estimation: AR1, PCSE, Fixed Effects

Page 8: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon
Page 9: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon
Page 10: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

Analysis II: Determinants of Exchange Rate Preferences

• Sample: Manufacturing firms in developing countries in 1999 (World Business Environment Survey)

• Dependent Var.: Exchange Rate Problem (Broz et al)

• Independent Variables– Overvaluation: Same as before (Rodrik)– State-owned banks: Continuous var. (Micco et al)– Interaction Term: Overvaluation State-Owned Banks

• Estimation: Ordered Probit, Robust SE

Page 11: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon
Page 12: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon
Page 13: The Conditional Effect of Interest Groups on Undervalued Exchange Rates David Steinberg University of Oregon

Conclusions• Exchange Rate Politics– Interest groups matter…but only under certain conditions– Undervalued exchange rates rare b/c tradable industries

do not always support undervaluation

• Implications for IPE:– Preferences are context-dependent– States (capacity) shapes preferences

• Implications for Policymakers– Various elements of the Washington Consensus

incompatible