About B.O.I
Exchange Rates
Press Releases
Monetary Policy
Banking System
Payment Systems
Information and Data
Series Database
Publications
Notes and Coins
Economic Developments
What's New
Visitors Center
Public Enquiries
    
 
        ברית   
  Home Page  > Publications  > Discussion Paper Series - Research Department  
Discussion Paper Series - Research Department

The Real Exchange Rate and the Balassa-Samuelson Hypothesis:
An Appraisal of Israel's Case Since 1986

Dmitri Romanov

Abstract

The Balassa-Samuelson hypothesis, explaining real exchange rate volatility by the differential productivity of the tradable and nontradable sectors, was found to generally fit macro-economic developments since 1986. It turns out that the traditional measures of real exchange rate - the ratio of export/import prices to business-sector product prices -overstated the extent of real appreciation in 1993, 1997-1998, and 2001, being influenced by declining world trade prices, in comparison to the exchange rate of shekel to the US dollar adjusted by GDP deflators. The latter measure has a U-form with a turning point in 1997, suggesting robust real depreciation since then. The elasticity of this real exchange rate with regard to the appreciation of nontradable goods is estimated at 0.7-0.85, while the elasticity with regard to the terms of trade is unitary.


The full article in PDF file
To the Discussion Paper Series - Research Department page

Print mode
© Copyright 2012 The Bank of Israel, All Rights Reserved   כל הזכויות שמורות בנק ישראל © 2012