Uncertainty, Flexible Exchange Rates, and Agglomeration

This paper shows that exchange rate variability promotes agglomeration of economic activity. Under flexible rates, firms located in large markets have lower variability of sales, reinforcing concentration of firms there. Empirical evidence on OECD countries demonstrates (1) that the negative effect of country size on variability of industrial production is stronger after the 1973 collapse of fixed rates and (2) for small (large) countries, exchange rates variability has a long-run negative (positive) effect on net inward FDI flows. Two implications arise: creating a currency area fosters agglomeration in the area, and a two-stage EMU may exacerbate the current uneven regional development.
Publication date: February 1998
ISBN: 9781451927351
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Money and Monetary Policy , Money and Monetary Policy , Flexible exchange rates , Agglomeration , Two-stage EMU , exchange rate , exchange rate variability , economic geography , exchange rates

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