Author:
Shane Mathew,Roe Terry,Somwaru Agapi
Abstract
While it is generally accepted that change in the real value of the dollar is an important determinant of exports, it has not been rigorously demonstrated that this relationship, derivable from theory, holds empirically for agricultural exports and the components of agricultural exports. Starting with a dynamic maximizing framework, this paper estimates the real trade-weighted exchange rate and trade partner income effects on U. S. agricultural exports. For the period 1970–2006, a one percent annual increase in trade partners’ income is found to increase total agricultural exports by about 0. 75 percent, while a one percent appreciation of the dollar relative to trade partner trade-weighted currencies decreases total agricultural exports by about 0. 5 percent. While these effects carry over to 12 commodity subcategories, they are conditioned by differences between bulk and high value commodities, and differences in the export demand from high compared to low income countries. We use a directed acyclic graphs (DAG) technique to identify the inverted fork causal relationships from vector autoregression (VAR) models. We also find that there is an asymmetric exchange rate effect so that the negative effect of exchange rate appreciation on exports sometimes dominates the positive effect of foreign income growth.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Agronomy and Crop Science
Reference59 articles.
1. Macroeconomic Linkages, Taxes, and Subsidies in the U.S. Agricultural Sector
2. Because exports are lagged one year behind exchange rates and adjusted GDP, the actual time frame extends from 1970 to 2007, with exports extending from 1971 to 2007 and exchange rates and adjusted GDP extending from 1970 to 2006.
3. The Exchange Rate and U. S. Agriculture
4. Triangular structural model specification and estimation with application to causality
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