Affiliation:
1. Çukurova University, Adana, Turkey
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to test for the sustainability of current
account in 18 developed and 10 developing countries. The stability of the
relationship between export (inflows) and import (outflows) is assessed using
the tests proposed by Mohitosh Kejriwal and Pierre Perron (2010). In
particular, the nature of the long-run relationship, when multiple regime
shifts are identified endogenously, is analyzed using the residual-based test
of the null hypothesis of cointegration with multiple breaks proposed by
Kejriwal (2008). The results clearly indicate that, for all countries, (i)
the stability tests reject the null of coefficient stability of the long-run
relationship between exports and imports; (ii) the cointegration tests that
correspond to the number of breaks selected reject the null of cointegration
(weak form of sustainability); and (iii) the strong form of sustainability
hypothesis is not supported by the data for all countries in most regimes but
not for 20 of 28 countries especially in the last regime (the post-2000
era). For eight countries (Canada, New Zealand, Spain, Brazil, Mexico, South
Africa, Thailand, and Turkey), the findings may be perceived as a warning to
creditors and policymakers unless there are policy distortions or permanent
productivity shocks to the domestic economies.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. The Extent, Excessiveness and Sustainability of Afghanistan’s Current Account;Foreign Trade Review;2024-04-28
2. Intertemporal current account sustainability in the presence of structural breaks;Zbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci: časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu/Proceedings of Rijeka Faculty of Economics: Journal of Economics and Business;2018-12-30
3. Current account sustainability: A non-linear comparative empirical overview;Panoeconomicus;2018