The Dynamics of Exchange Rate Volatility: A Panel VAR Approach

Axel Grossmann, Inessa Love, Alexei G. Orlov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

86 Scopus citations

Abstract

This paper employs a panel vector autoregressive model (PVAR) to study the dynamics of the overall exchange rate volatility. PVAR estimation results, based on panel data for 29 economies, are used in simulating impulse response functions. Since economic shocks may affect high-frequency and low-frequency components of volatility differently, using a conventional time-domain approach to study volatility may lead to spurious results. Accordingly, the paper also studies the dynamics of the most destabilizing (high-frequency) components of exchange rate volatility, which are isolated using spectral methodology. While our investigation reveals interesting dynamic interrelationships between macroeconomic as well as financial variables and exchange rate volatility, we find little evidence of significant difference in the responses of macroeconomic and financial variables to the overall volatility vis-à-vis the high-frequency components thereof. The feedback effects from exchange rate volatility to macroeconomic and financial variables are found to be much stronger for developing countries relative to developed economies. These findings are confirmed by variance decompositions and are largely immune to several robustness checks.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalJournal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money
Volume33
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2014

Disciplines

  • Business Administration, Management, and Operations
  • Finance
  • Finance and Financial Management
  • Economics

Keywords

  • Exchange rate volatility
  • Financial variables
  • High-frequency components of volatility
  • Panel VAR estimation and simulation
  • Spectral analysis

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