Real Exchange Rates, Saving and Growth : Is There a Link ?
The view that policies directed at the real exchange rate can have an important effect on economic growth has been gaining adherents in recent years. Unlike the traditional "misalignment" view that temporary departures of the real exchang...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/05/9474401/real-exchange-rates-saving-growth-link http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6698 |
Summary: | The view that policies directed at the
real exchange rate can have an important effect on economic
growth has been gaining adherents in recent years. Unlike
the traditional "misalignment" view that temporary
departures of the real exchange rate from its equilibrium
level harm growth by distorting a key relative price in the
economy, the recent literature stresses the growth effects
of the equilibrium real exchange rate itself, with the claim
being that a depreciated equilibrium real exchange rate
promotes economic growth. While there is no consensus on the
precise channels through which this effect is generated, an
increasingly common view in policy circles points to saving
as the channel of transmission, with the claim that a
depreciated real exchange rate raises the domestic saving
rate -- which in turn stimulates growth by increasing the
rate of capital accumulation. This paper offers a
preliminary exploration of this claim. Drawing from standard
analytical models, stylized facts on saving and real
exchange rates, and existing empirical research on saving
determinants, the paper assesses the link between the real
exchange rate and saving. Overall, the conclusion is that
saving is unlikely to provide the mechanism through which
the real exchange rate affects growth. |
---|