Is Exchange Rate Stabilization an Appropriate Cure for the Dutch Disease?

This paper evaluates how successful is a policy of exchange rate stabilization to counteract the negative effects of a Dutch Disease episode. We consider a small open economy model that incorporates nominal rigidities and a learning-by-doing externality in the tradable sector. The paper shows that leaning against an appreciated exchange rate can prevent an inefficient loss of tradable output but at the cost of generating a misallocation of resources in other sectors of the economy. The paper also finds that welfare is a decreasing function of exchange rate intervention. These results suggest that stabilizing the nominal exchange rate in response to a Dutch Disease episode is highly distortionary.
Publication date: August 2010
ISBN: 9781455202164
$18.00
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Money and Monetary Policy , International - Economics , Learning-by-doing , Small open economy , exchange rate , exchange rate intervention , real exchange rate , open economy , commodity prices , Open Economy Macroeconomics

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