Affiliation:
1. Cranfield School of Management, Cranfield University
2. Βlack Sea Trade and Development Bank
3. Cranfield School of Management
Abstract
This paper explores the effect of U.S. domestic politics on the behaviour of
international currency markets. Specifically, for the first time in the
literature, we gauge the impact of a divided government on the exchange rate
volatility of five currencies: the Japanese yen, the Canadian dollar, the
British pound, the Mexican peso, and the euro. At the same time, we control
for the impact of political and macroeconomic factors. A GARCH methodology
has been adopted for this objective, using weekly data from 2000 to 2021.
The evidence suggests that the partisan and divided government variables
significantly impact the conditional variance equation, whilst the observed
reduced levels of exchange rate volatility during a Democrat presidency run
counter to prior studies on partisanship. In addition, exchange rate
volatility seems to increase one month before an election and during periods
of divided government. Given the nascent evidence, we argue that U.S.
politics are instrumental in affecting global financial markets.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance