Estimating covariance between exchange rate devaluation and oil price volatility during COVID-19

Author:

Umoru David1ORCID,Effiong Solomon Edem2ORCID,Umar Shehu Salisu3,Eleh Clement Chibuzoe2,Ihensekhien Orobosa Abraham4ORCID,Ovenseri-Ogbomo Friday Osaru4,Ihuoma Chineleobi Chris5,Tizhe Ann Nuhu6

Affiliation:

1. Edo State University Uzairue

2. Wellspring University

3. Auchi Polytechnic

4. Benson Idahosa University

5. United Bank for Africa

6. University of Benin

Abstract

The economies of West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ) countries have recorded a long trend of currency devaluation and hiking instability in oil prices. We estimated the covariance of currency devaluation and volatilities in global oil prices caused by the COVID-19 outbreak on WAMZ economies from January 30 to December 30, 2020. The BEKK model was estimated for analysis. The results from generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) show that all variance equation coefficients, are significant, suggesting strong volatility transmission and spillovers between the COVID-19 outbreak and oil price shocks on the economic performance of WAMZ. The estimates obtained for both current and lagged gross domestic product (GDP) equations are relatively similar. Consequently, all WAMZ economies weakly responded to shocks arising from fluctuations in international oil prices, volatility of inflation rate, and excess devaluation caused by the COVID-19 outbreak. The instabilities in oil prices and devaluation caused by the COVID-19 outbreak had decelerating consequences on the output growth of WAMZ economies. The estimated covariance effects of oil price shock and currency devaluation are negative for all countries in the study. A 1 percent devaluation-oil price shock caused by the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in negative output growth rates of 1.3 percent, 1.12 percent, 1.1 percent, and 1.09 percent in Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Ghana, and The Gambia, respectively.

Publisher

Virtus Interpress

Subject

Strategy and Management,Public Administration,Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Business and International Management

Reference60 articles.

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2. Adeniran, A., & Onyekwena, C. (2020, September 11). Strengthening international cooperation in the time of COVID-19: A perspective on African-China relation. CSEA Africa — Centre for the Study of the Economies of Africa. https://cseaafrica.org/strengthening-international-cooperation-in-the-time-covid-19-a-perspective-on-african-china-relation/

3. Adeniyi, F. O. (2020). Impact of foreign direct investment and inflation on the economic growth of five randomly selected countries in Africa. Journal of Economics and International Finance, 12(2), 65–73. https://doi.org/10.5897/JEIF2020.1031

4. Adeoye, B. W., & Saibu, O. M. (2014). Monetary policy shocks and exchange rate volatility in Nigeria. Asian Economic and Financial Review, 4(4), 544–562. https://archive.aessweb.com/index.php/5002/article/view/1177

5. Aderemi, T. A., Akinwande, S. A., Olayemi, H. O., & Omogboye, M. A. (2019). Impact of monetary policy on exchange rate test and ARDL approach. Acta Universitatis Danubius, 15(4), 234–243. https://journals.univ-danubius.ro/index.php/oeconomica/article/view/5527

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