1 / 42

The Effect of European Monetary Union on Trade

Explore the effects of joining a monetary union, potential benefits, costs incurred, and the debate in literature regarding the magnitude of trade effects. Analyze the differences between the European Economic and Monetary Union and other currency unions. Discover findings from comprehensive econometric methodologies and the significance of the sample in determining trade effects.

jodym
Télécharger la présentation

The Effect of European Monetary Union on Trade

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Effect of European MonetaryUnion on Trade Andrew K. Rose UC Berkeley-Haas, ABFER, CEPR, NBER Berkeley, March 2019 (for Eichengreen’s Ec191)

  2. Currency Unions • Bilateral Currency Unions (“Dollarization”) • British £: Bahamas (-1965), NZ (-1966), India (-1966), Ireland (-1978) …. • US $: Panama, Bahamas (1966-), Ecuador (2000-), El Salvador (2001-), Zimbabwe (2009-) …. • Fr Franc: Morocco (-1957), Algeria (-1968) … • Multilateral Currency Unions • CFA Franc Zones • Eastern Caribbean Currency Union • Common (Rand) Monetary Area • European Economic and Monetary Union, EMU (1999-)

  3. Costs and Benefits of Joining a Monetary Union Key Costs • Loss of nominal exchange rate as policy tool • Loss of national monetary policy control • EMU: these costs are high! Potential (Economic) Benefits • Greater transparency of prices encourages greater competition and efficiency • Reduced currency risk encourages more trade and investment • Is there actually any substantive benefit in the data?

  4. Debate in Literature on Magnitude of Trade Effect of CUs • Big, 90-100%. • e.g. Glick and Rose (2002), Frankel (2010) • Moderate, 40-50% • e.g. Eicher and Henn (2011) • Small, 0-20% • e.g. Micco et al (2003), Bun and Klaasen (2002, 2007), de Nardis and Vicarelli (2003), Flam and Nordstrom (2007), Berger and Nitsch (2008), Camarero et al (2013) • Negative? • e.g. Baldwin and Taglioni (2007)

  5. Specific Motivation • Glick-Rose (2002) used panel approach to investigate effect of currency unions on trade, using data for 1948-1997 before establishment of EMU • Found currency unions increase trade by ≈90% • Current paper uses data for 1948-2013 and asks • Is EMU similar to other currency unions? • Is there symmetry between currency union exit and entry? • Assumed symmetry before. Couldn’t test because had only 16 entries, 130 exits in 1948-1997 sample • Can test now with EMU entries • Do advances in methodology matter?

  6. Preview of Findings • EMU different from other CUs, increases trade among EMU countries by ~50% • Find symmetry • Econometric methodology matters a lot • Sample matters a lot as well

  7. Measuring Trade Effects“Old” Methodology: Gravity Equation ln(Tradeijt) = CUijt + Zijt+ {δt} +ijt • Tradeijt = average nominal value of bilateral trade between i and j at time t, • CU = 1 if i and j use the same currency at time t and 0 otherwise, • Z = gravity control variables, usual suspects: e.g. GDP, distance, common language, border, regional RTA, colonial history, etc. … • {δt} = year-specific effects

  8. Methodological Issues in Estimating • Simultaneity (persists) • Omitted variables • Effects of CU between i and j on other countries through “multilateral resistance” effects • General equilibrium effects on spending and output for all countries • Homogeneity implicit in treating all currency unions alike

  9. Data Set • IMF DoTS trade: >200 “countries” 1948-2013 (with gaps) • Population, real GDP: WDI > PWT > IFS • Country Characteristics: World Factbook • Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs): WTO • Currency Unions: Glick-Rose updated • 1:1 par for extended period of time (not just hard fixes) • Transitive: x-y and y-z imply x-z

  10. Full Results

  11. Gravity Estimates for Trade e1.3 ~3.7x e.92 ~2.5x nil Note: Pooled OLS estimates. Other gravity regressors and year dummies included, but not reported. Robust standard errors in parentheses.

  12. Prefer (Within) Fixed Pair Effect Estimator • Exploits variation over time, answers the policy question of interest, i.e. the (time series) question • “What is the trade effect of a country joining (or leaving) a currency union?” • Controls for unobserved pair effects, including potential endogeneity of currency union ln(Tradeijt) = CUijt + Zijt+ {δt} + {θij} +ijt

  13. Gravity  Estimates for Trade with Pair Fixed Effects e.41 -1 ~ 51% Note: Pooled OLS estimates. Other gravity regressors and year dummies included, but not reported. Robust standard errors in parentheses.

  14. How Does this Compare with Literature? • Easiest to graph (large) literature

  15. Forest Plot of (45) Literature EMU Estimates

  16. Meta-Estimate • Random effects estimator delivers estimate of (exp(.116)-1≈) 12.3% • Economically non-trivial • Statistically significant • Robust to reasonable sub-samples

  17. Meta-Estimates of EMU Trade/Export Effect

  18. Publication Bias • Over twenty (of 45) papers unpublished • Still, can investigate easily with standard techniques • Funnel plots of estimate against precision indicates weak right skew • Many estimates outside 95% confidence interval! • Results in Figure 2 • Conclude: little evidence of publication bias • But worrying dispersion!

  19. Publication Bias

  20. Why do EMU Estimates Vary Across Studies? • Rising with (log) observations • Small (positive) effect of years in EMU • Positive (big) effect of span in years • Positive (big) effect of number countries • Histograms, scatterplots, regressions all provided in Figure 3 • Note paucity of observations • Special note: usually very few countries in sample

  21. EMU Effect and Sample Size

  22. Confirmation via Meta-Regression • Want to check ocular evidence • Strong positive effect of #countries • Strong positive effect of #years • Other effects? • Check via Meta Regression Analysis • Check for sensitivity to weighting • Check for other determinants

  23. Meta Regressions of EMU Trade Effect

  24. Quick Summary • In literature: longer, wider spans of data over both time and countries systematically associated with higher estimate of EMU trade effect • Curious … extra data increases γeven if extra observations not directly relevant to EMU! • (Explains why these observations – e.g., small/poor countries – often omitted from studies; natural to include only relevant observations when estimating EMU trade effect – encompassing)

  25. Caveat • But … only 7 papers in literature use preferred methodology (exports, dyadic and time-varying country fixed effects) … and most papers use few countries (median 22), years (median 20) • So, seems wise to check meta-results with actual data, plain-vanilla methodology

  26. What’s Trustworthy? Measuring Trade Effects Newer (Export) Gravity Models • Much work on “theory-consistent” gravity estimation • Use Least Squares with time-varying country Dummy Variables (LSDV) (+ dyadic FE) to control for multilateral resistance, other general equilibrium effects: ln(Exportsijt) = CUijt + Zijt+ {λit} + {ψjt} + {θij} + ijt • Xijt = nominal bilateral exports from i to j at time t, • {λit} = set oftime-varyingexporter dummy variables, • {ψjt} = set of time-varying importer dummy variables • {θij} = set of time-invariant pair-specific dummy variables

  27. Gravity  Estimates for Exportswith country-year effects for exporter & importer& country pair FE e.43 -1 ~ 54% Note: Other gravity regressors and year dummies included, but not reported. Robust standard errors in parentheses.

  28. Tangent: Allow for Dynamic Effects • Add (14) leads and lags around currency union exit/entry • i.e. Add ΣkθkCUENTRYijt-k + ΣkφkCUEXITijt-k to gravity equation • Distinguish effects between EMU/non-EMU exit and entries • Estimate with pair FE • Test for Symmetry (post-entry = - post-exit) • Find symmetry holds well

  29. Allowing Dynamic Effects, CU exit lowers exports, entry raises exports Figure 2

  30. Symmetry Tests, Exports with country-year and pair FE Can’t reject Can’t reject Table reports F-test statistic for Ho of identical slopes ΣkθkΣkφk for given CU pairs and time periods

  31. Sensitivity Analysis of  Estimates : Dis-aggregating Other CUs Note: Other gravity regressors, country-year and pair dummies included, but not reported. 879,794 annual observations, 1948-2013.

  32. Sensitivity Analysis of  EMU Estimates: Varying Country and Sample Period Note: dependent variable is log exports. Other gravity regressors, country-year and pair dummies included, but not reported. Robust standard errors in parentheses; no. of obs. in brackets.

  33. Dimensionality Effects • Adding more years increases γ! • Adding more countries increases γ • Consistent with meta-regressions!

  34. Gravity Estimates of EMU EffectVarying end dates and country samples

  35. Graphical Estimates of EMU Export Effect

  36. Conclusions from Meta-Regression-cum-Regression Analysis • Throwing away data easily allows one to estimate small/negative EMU export effect • Adding years of data in EMU (relevant!) increases EMU export effect • Adding countries outside EMU (seemingly irrelevant!) increases EMU export effect

  37. Why the Differences? • Anderson and van Wincoop (2003, p 176); multilateral trade resistance depends positively on trade barriers with all trading partners • Dropping small and/or poor countries (likely to have systematically different trade resistance) leads to biased estimates of multilateral trade resistance; higher multilateral resistance leads to more trade. • Downward-biased estimates of multilateral resistance biases γ down. • Multilateral trade resistance is a function of all bilateral trade barriers, so all trade partners should be included

  38. Estimates of Multilateral Resistance:Evidence of Bias

  39. Summary • Glick-Rose (2002) concluded “a pair of countries which joined/left a currency union experienced a near-doubling/halving of bilateral trade.” • Based on: • Assumption of symmetry between currency union exits and entries • Caveat: EMU might be different from other currency unions • Our results insensitive to precise econometric methodology • Here, re-estimate using variety of models, annual panel >200 countries, 1948-2013, 15 EMU years

  40. Conclusions • Methodology and sample matter • Preferred methodology is panel with country-pair fixed effects • Preferred sample includes all countries, all periods of time • Symmetry holds between currency union entry and exits • EMU is different • EMU boosts trade by 50% • Other currency unions have different effects on trade

  41. Conclusion/Summary: Why do Estimatesof EMU Trade Effect Vary so Much? • Varying sample sizes by time and (especially) country • More Data is Better! • Established via meta-analysis and regressions • Truncating sample (omitting small/poor countries) biases downward EMU trade effect in a) theory, b) data, and c) literature • Including entire post-war sample of countries/years delivers large estimate of EMU export effect of γ≈.43 or (exp(.43-1≈) 54%! • Economically large (may grow) • Statistically significant (robust t-statistic>20) • Quite consistent with Rose-Stanley survey (2005): 47%

  42. Future Research • Handling zero and missing trade observations • LS estimates may be biased because of: • Heteroskedasticity, and/or • Discarded observations of zero/missing trade • Santos Silva and Tenreyro propose Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood to handle both • Used to be difficult in big panels • Now Done by Larch, Wanner, Yotov and Zylkin, others • Interaction of effects of joining CUs and other forms of economic integration, such as regional trade arrangements • Countries joined EU shortly before EMU

More Related