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Estimating Egypt's Equilibrium Real Exchange Rate | 1998

Estimating Egypt`s Equilibrium Real Exchange Rate

Joannes Mongardini

In light of the real appreciation of the Egyptian pound over the last six years and Egypt’s lackluster export growth, questions of external competitiveness and exchange rate policy have arisen. This paper sheds light on these issues by estimating empirically Egypt’s equilibrium real exchange rate, that is, the rate that is consistent with fundamentals. The results show that, while the real exchange rate was substantially overvalued before 1993, today it is only moderately above the equilibrium rate. Moreover, the analysis shows that the recent appreciation of the pound does not indicate a worsening misalignment.


IMF Staff Papers | 1999

Ratchet Effects in Currency Substitution: An Application to the Kyrgyz Republic

Joannes Mongardini; Johannes Mueller

Currency substitution has been a common issue in the design of monetary policy in most transition economies. This paper analyzes the persistence of this phenomenon in the Kyrgyz Republic up to start of the Russia crisis by including a ratchet variable in the model specification. It concludes that, while some degree of persistence was present in the allocation of bank deposits at that time, currency substitution in the economy at large had not yet reached a point where reversing it would have been costly.


Grants, Remittances, and the Equilibrium Real Exchange Rate in Sub-Saharan African Countries | 2009

Grants, Remittances, and the Equilibrium Real Exchange Rate in Sub-Saharan African Countries

Joannes Mongardini; Brett Rayner

This paper builds on the methodology developed by Chudik and Mongardini (2007) to estimate the relationship between grants and remittances and the equilibrium real exchange rate in Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries using panel techniques. The results indicate that grants and remittances are not associated, in the long run, with an appreciation of the real effective exchange in SSA and are therefore not likely to give rise to Dutch disease effects. These findings suggest that grants and remittances may be serving to ease supply constraints or boost productivity in the non-tradable sector in the recipient economies.


Archive | 2007

In Search of Equilibrium: Estimating Equilibrium Real Exchange Rates in Sub-Saharan African Countries

Joannes Mongardini; Alexander Chudik

This paper presents a methodology to estimate equilibrium real exchange rates (ERER) for Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries using both single-country and panel estimation techniques. The limited data set hinders single-country estimation for most countries in the sample, but panel estimates are statistically and economically significant, and generally robust to different estimation techniques. The results replicate well the historical experience for a number of countries in the sample. Panel techniques can also be used to derive out of sample estimates for countries with a more limited data set.


Archive | 2003

Estimating Indexes of Coincident and Leading Indicators : An Application to Jordan

Joannes Mongardini; Tahsin Saadi-Sedik

The analysis of coincident and leading indicators can help policymakers gauge the short-term direction of economic activity. While such analysis is well established in advanced economies, it has received relatively little attention in many emerging market and developing economies, reflecting in part the lack of sufficient historical data to determine the reliability of these indicators. This paper presents an econometric approach to deriving composite indexes of coincident and leading indicators for a small open economy, Jordan. The results show that, even with limited monthly observations, it is possible to establish meaningful economic and statistically significant relations between indicators from different sectors of the economy and the present and future direction of economic activity.


The Design of Fiscal Adjustment Strategies in Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, and Swaziland | 2011

The Design of Fiscal Adjustment Strategies in Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, and Swaziland

Luis-Felipe Zanna; Olivier Basdevant; Susan S. Yang; Genevieve Verdier; Joannes Mongardini; Borislava Mircheva; Dalmacio Benicio

Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, and Swaziland face the serious challenge of adjusting not only to lower Southern Africa Customs Union (SACU) transfers because of the global economic crisis, but also to a potential further decline over the medium term. This paper assesses options for the design of the needed fiscal consolidation. The choice among these options should be driven by (i) the impact on growth and (ii) the specificities of each country. Overall, a focus on government consumption cuts appears to minimize the negative impact on growth, and would be appropriate given the relatively large size of the public sector in each country.


Archive | 2009

The Macroeconomics of Scaling Up Aid: The Gleneagles Initiative for Benin

Joannes Mongardini; Issouf Samaké

This paper assesses the macroeconomic implications of scaling up aid for Benin in line with the Gleneagles commitment to double aid to poor countries over the next three years to reach


IMF Staff Discussion Note: Macroeconomic Management When Policy Space Is Constrained - A Comprehensive, Consistent, and Coordinated Approach to Economic Policy | 2016

Macroeconomic Management When Policy Space is Constrained; A Comprehensive, Consistent and Coordinated Approach to Economic Policy

Vitor Gaspar; Maurice Obstfeld; Ratna Sahay; Douglas Laxton; Dennis P. J. Botman; Kevin Clinton; Romain Duval; Kotaro Ishi; Zoltan Jakab; Laura Jaramillo; Constant Lonkeng Ngouana; Tommaso Mancini Griffoli; Joannes Mongardini; Susanna Mursula; Erlend Nier; Yulia Ustyugova; Hou Wang; Oliver Wuensch

85 per capita by 2010 and keep it at that level thereafter. The analysis suggests that the additional aid inflows can be accommodated under Fund-supported programs without major disruptions to macroeconomic stability, provided the inflows are highly concessional and used effectively. There are, however, significant risks that the impact on growth and poverty reduction of the additional aid inflows could fall short of expectations, given Benins limited absorptive and administrative capacity.


Archive | 2016

Reflating Japan; Time to Get Unconventional?

Elif C. Arbatli; Dennis P. J. Botman; Kevin Clinton; Pietro Cova; Vitor Gaspar; Zoltan Jakab; Douglas Laxton; Constant Lonkeng Ngouana; Joannes Mongardini; Hou Wang

The recovery in GDP growth since the global financial crisis has been halting and weak. Concern is widespread that countercyclical policies have run out of space or lack the power to raise growth or deal with the next negative shock. This note argues that room exists for effective policies and that it should be used if appropriate. The most promising route involves a comprehensive, consistent, and coordinated approach to policy making. Comprehensive policy actions within a country exploit synergies, making the whole greater than the sum of parts. Consistent policy frameworks anchor long-term expectations while allowing decisive short- to medium-term accommodation whenever necessary. Coordinated policies across major economies amplify the helpful effects of individual policy actions through positive cross-border spillovers. The findings of this paper indicate that policy coordination adds particular value if the current approach falls short of reviving growth, or in the event of a further downward shock.


World Scientific Book Chapters | 2016

Mitigating the Deadly Embrace in Financial Cycles; Countercyclical Buffers and Loan-to-Value Limits

Jaromir Benes; Douglas Laxton; Joannes Mongardini

Japan has ambitious economic goals: 3 percent nominal growth; 2 percent inflation; and a primary budget surplus. Abenomics has employed the three arrows of monetary, fiscal and structural policies, but the goals remain out of reach. We propose that countercyclical measures be embedded in long-run frameworks that anchor expectations for inflation and public debt. In addition, we argue for an incomes policy to assist reflation. Model simulations suggest that, combined, these proposals would make headway towards the goals, with, on balance, a better chance of success than the more unconventional policy alternatives proposed by Krugman, Svensson, and Turner from a risk-return perspective.

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Hou Wang

International Monetary Fund

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Zoltan Jakab

International Monetary Fund

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Alexander Chudik

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

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Dalmacio Benicio

International Monetary Fund

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