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Trade Elasticities in the Middle East and Central Asia : : What is the Role of Oil? / / Andreas Billmeier, Dalia Hakura



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Autore: Billmeier Andreas Visualizza persona
Titolo: Trade Elasticities in the Middle East and Central Asia : : What is the Role of Oil? / / Andreas Billmeier, Dalia Hakura Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2008
Edizione: 1st ed.
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (35 p.)
Disciplina: 338.516
Soggetto topico: Elasticity (Economics) - Middle East
Elasticity (Economics) - Asia, Central
Elasticity (Economics) - Econometric models
Exports and Imports
Macroeconomics
Price Level
Inflation
Deflation
Trade: General
Empirical Studies of Trade
International economics
Trade balance
Export prices
Exports
Import prices
Imports
Balance of trade
Soggetto geografico: Saudi Arabia
Altri autori: HakuraDalia  
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di contenuto: Contents; I. Introduction; II. Methodology; III. Empirical Analysis of Middle East and Central Asian Countries Elasticities; A. Model Specification and Empirical Strategy; B. Estimation Results; Tables; 1. Volume of Imports: Coefficient Estimates and Implied Elasticities; 2. Export Volumes: Coefficient Estimates and Implied Elasticities; C. Trade Balances; 3. Non-Oil Export Volumes: Coefficient Estimates and Implied Elasticities; 4. Decomposition of the Impact of a Ten Percent Real Depreciation on the Trade Balance of Middle East and Central Asia Countries
5. Trade Balance Elasticities for Non-Oil Exporting Middle East and Central Asia Countries, 2006 and 20136. Trade Balance Elasticities for Middle East and Central Asia Oil Exporters, and 2013; IV. A Generalized Approach; A. Generalized CGER Methodology; B. Empirical Estimation of the Elasticities of the Relative Import and Export Prices to the Real Exchange Rate; 7. Relative Import and Export Price Elasticities to the Real Effective Exchange Rate; C. Alternative Trade Balance Elasticities
8. Decomposition of the Impact of a 10 Percent Real Depreciation on the Trade Balance of Non-Oil Exporting Middle East and Central Asia Countries9. Decomposition of the Impact of a 10 Percent Real Depreciation on the Trade Balance of Oil-Exporting Middle East and Central Asia Countries; V. Conclusions; References; Appendices; 1. Data Appendix; 2. Derivation of the Formula for the Elasticity of the Trade Balance Vis-à-vis the Real Exchange Rate
Sommario/riassunto: The analysis in this paper suggests that import and export volume elasticities are markedly lower in oil-exporting Middle East and Central Asian countries than in non-oil countries in the region. A key implication of this finding is that a real appreciation of the exchange rate in oil-exporting countries would achieve little in terms of expenditure switching: an appreciation does not boost imports and non-oil exports constitute only a small share of GDP and total trade in these countries. Therefore, while a real appreciation lowers the current account surplus of oil-exporting countries through valuation effects, the contribution to lowering global imbalances may be more limited.
Titolo autorizzato: Trade Elasticities in the Middle East and Central Asia  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 1-4623-5175-1
1-4527-9347-6
1-282-84167-X
9786612841675
1-4518-7074-4
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910816918203321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Serie: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; ; No. 2008/216