Trade Elasticities in the Middle East and Central Asia : What is the Role of Oil?

The analysis in this paper suggests that import and export volume elasticities are markedly lower in oil-exporting Middle East and Central Asian countries than in non-oil countries in the region. A key implication of this finding is that a real appreciation of the exchange rate in oil-exporting countries would achieve little in terms of expenditure switching: an appreciation does not boost imports and non-oil exports constitute only a small share of GDP and total trade in these countries. Therefore, while a real appreciation lowers the current account surplus of oil-exporting countries through valuation effects, the contribution to lowering global imbalances may be more limited.
Publication date: September 2008
ISBN: 9781451870749
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This title contains information about the following subjects. Click on a subject if you would like to see other titles with the same subjects.

Exports and Imports , International - Economics , trade elasticities , current account adjustment , export prices , exporting countries , export volume , oil exports , oil exporters

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