On the suitability of alternative competitiveness indicators for explaining real exports of advanced economies
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Real exports are commonly specified as depending on an indicator of price competitiveness and on a measure of foreign activity. This study empirically investigates the suitability of alternative competitiveness indicators in explaining real exports for a broad group of advanced economies. To this end, a panel cointegration analysis is conducted, augmented by a forecasting exercise. In the latter, repeated sampling techniques are used in order to avoid arbitrary sample splits. We find that broad price- and cost-based indicators are to be preferred to narrow price based measures such as CPI- or PPI-deflated real exchange rates. Furthermore, the evidence points towards using world trade as the external activity variable instead of GDP- or real imports-based measures.
Nákup knihy
On the suitability of alternative competitiveness indicators for explaining real exports of advanced economies, Christoph Fischer
- Jazyk
- Rok vydání
- 2016
Doručení
Platební metody
Navrhnout úpravu
- Titul
- On the suitability of alternative competitiveness indicators for explaining real exports of advanced economies
- Jazyk
- anglicky
- Autoři
- Christoph Fischer
- Vydavatel
- 2016
- ISBN10
- 3957292999
- ISBN13
- 9783957292995
- Kategorie
- Podnikání a ekonomie
- Anotace
- Real exports are commonly specified as depending on an indicator of price competitiveness and on a measure of foreign activity. This study empirically investigates the suitability of alternative competitiveness indicators in explaining real exports for a broad group of advanced economies. To this end, a panel cointegration analysis is conducted, augmented by a forecasting exercise. In the latter, repeated sampling techniques are used in order to avoid arbitrary sample splits. We find that broad price- and cost-based indicators are to be preferred to narrow price based measures such as CPI- or PPI-deflated real exchange rates. Furthermore, the evidence points towards using world trade as the external activity variable instead of GDP- or real imports-based measures.