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The sources of current account fluctuations in small open economies

Posted on:2007-05-23Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The American UniversityCandidate:Ahn, Hyung IkFull Text:PDF
GTID:1449390005464195Subject:Economics
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation investigates the sources of consumption and current account fluctuations of four representative small open economies (Canada, Korea, Mexico, and the United Kingdom) using quarterly data. This study develops an open economy heterogeneous-agent theoretical model, and tests the implications of the model by estimating single equation and structural vector-autoregression (SVAR) empirical models. This dissertation explores interpretations related to liquidity constraints and an overborrowing syndrome (associated with financial liberalization) as the sources of different consumption and current account behavior between developed and developing countries.; First, the empirical results suggest that the theoretical model fits well for Mexico compared to other countries. Second, from the single equation models, while Mexico's consumption appears to be strongly affected by disposable income fluctuations. Korea's consumption appears to be strongly affected by external fluctuations. Further, statistical tests for an (unknown) structural break can not find strong evidence for a structural break for all countries. These results do not support the argument for a secular decline in liquidity constraints as a result of economic liberalization. Third, findings from the single equation models on consumption persist in the SVAR framework on the current account. Canada and the United Kingdom's current account fluctuations appear to be mainly explained by domestic net output shocks. In contrast, Mexico's current account appears to be also substantially affected by domestic fiscal balance shocks; and Korea's current account appears to be also significantly affected by external shocks, in addition to domestic net output shocks. Thus, the open economy heterogeneous-agent model appears to reveal qualitative differences in consumption and current account behavior between developed and developing countries.
Keywords/Search Tags:Current account, Small open economies, Sources, Domestic net output shocks, Developed and developing countries, Economy heterogeneous-agent, Appears, Single equation models
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