Monetary Policy Shocks and Exchange Rate Dynamics in Small Open Economies

Files

hdl_150120.pdf (2.94 MB)
  (Article in press)

Date

2026

Authors

Terrell, M.
Haque, Q.
Cross, J.L.
Doko Tchatoka, F.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Journal of Applied Economics, 2026; 1-12

Statement of Responsibility

Madison Terrell, Qazi Haque, Jamie L. Cross, Firmin Doko Tchatoka

Conference Name

Abstract

This paper investigates whether the effects of monetary policy shocks on real exchange rates have changed over time and, if so, whether these changes stem from shifts in transmission mechanisms or from variation in the volatility of the shocks themselves. Using a time-varying parameter VAR with stochastic volatility for six small open economies, we first show that a constant-parameter VAR with stochastic volatility provides the best fit to the data in all six cases. We then employ an identification strategy that combines short- and long-run restrictions to isolate monetary policy shocks, and we evaluate its robustness using high-frequency monetary policy surprises as external instruments. Our results support Dornbusch's overshooting hypothesis in most countries. However, uncovered interest parity is frequently violated, as foreign excess returns diverge from zero following monetary policy shocks. Finally, we document a substantial decline in the volatility of monetary policy shocks since the 1990s, leading to a reduced contribution to exchange rate and macroeconomic fluctuations.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

OnlinePubl

Access Status

Rights

© 2026 The Author(s). Journal of Applied Econometrics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record