Evidence on real exchange rate – Inflation causality: An application of Toda-Yamamoto dynamic Granger causality test

The paper provides further evidence of the real exchange rate and inflation causal relationship using Toda-Yamamoto (1995) augmented Granger causality test in Malaysia, Nigeria, Philippines and South Africa.The critical values used in this study are simulated based on the leverage bootstrap.The re...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Umar, Mohammed, Dahalan, Jauhari
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/15492/1/1.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/15492/
http://www.pakrdw.com/?ic=details&id=12
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Summary:The paper provides further evidence of the real exchange rate and inflation causal relationship using Toda-Yamamoto (1995) augmented Granger causality test in Malaysia, Nigeria, Philippines and South Africa.The critical values used in this study are simulated based on the leverage bootstrap.The results are compared between the Granger asymptotic chi-square distribution, the modified WALD test statistics and the leverage bootstrapped distribution critical values. Conflicting findings are obtained which prove the existence of size distortion and nuisance parameter estimates when the former method is applied.The result based on the Toda-Yamamoto and leverage bootstrapped critical values reveal that policy intervention on inflation can stabilize real exchange rate in Malaysia and Nigeria but not vice versa.Moreover, bidirectional causation exists in Philippines and South Africa meaning that any policy intervention formulated on one variable can stabilize the other.The policy implication of this finding is that the policy makers can manipulate the rate of inflation to stabilize real exchange rate fluctuations in all countries under study, but can only regulate inflation through exchange rate in the case of Philippines and South Africa.