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The long-run interrelationship between exchange rate and interest rate: the case of Mexico

Salvatore Capasso (Institute of Studies on Mediterranean Societies, National Research Council, Naples, Italy) (Department of Business and Economic Studies, University of Naples, Naples, Italy) (CSEF, Naples, Italy)
Oreste Napolitano (Department of Business and Economic Studies, University of Naples, Naples, Italy)
Ana Laura Viveros Jiménez (Department of Business and Economic Studies, University of Naples, Naples, Italy) (Institute of Studies on Mediterranean Societies, National Research Council, Naples, Italy)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 11 November 2019

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to analyse the long-term nature of the interrelationship between interest rate and exchange rate.

Design/methodology/approach

By employing Mexican data, the authors estimate a non-linear autoregressive distributed lags (NARDL) model to investigate the nature of the changes and the interaction between interest rate and exchange rate in response to monetary authorities’ actions.

Findings

The results show that, contrary to simplistic predictions, the real exchange rate causes the real interest rate in an asymmetric way. The bounds testing approach of the NARDL models suggests the presence of co-integration among the variables and the exchange rate variations appear to have significant long-run effects on the interest rate. Most importantly, these effects are asymmetric and positive variations in the exchange rate have a lower impact on the interest rate. It is also interesting to report that the reverse is not true: the interest rate in the long-run exerts no statistical significant impact on the exchange rate.

Practical implications

The asymmetric long-term relationship between real exchange rate and real interest rate is evidence of why monetary authorities are reluctant to free float exchange rate. In Mexico, as in most developing countries, monetary policy strongly responds to exchange rate movements because these have relevant effects on commercial trade. Moreover, in dollarized economies these effects are stronger because of pass-through impacts to inflation, income distribution and balance-sheet equilibrium (the well-known “original sin”).

Originality/value

Under inflation targeting and flexible exchange rate regime, despite central banks pursue the control of short-term interest rate, in the long-run one could observe that it is the exchange rate that influences the interest rate, and that this reverse causality is stronger in emerging economies. This paper contributes by analysing the asymmetric relationship between the variables.

Keywords

Citation

Capasso, S., Napolitano, O. and Viveros Jiménez, A.L. (2019), "The long-run interrelationship between exchange rate and interest rate: the case of Mexico", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 46 No. 7, pp. 1380-1397. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-04-2019-0176

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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