An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging Economies

The paper employs asymmetric causality test based on Toda-Yamamoto (1995) causality approach to further investigate the causal relationship between exchange rate and inflation differentials in Brunei, Malaysia and Singapore. We simulate critical values based on leverage bootstrapping and asymmetric...

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Main Authors: Mohammed Umar, Jauhari Dahalan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EconJournals 2016-04-01
Series:International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/ijefi/issue/31978/352456?publisher=http-www-cag-edu-tr-ilhan-ozturk
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spelling doaj-a39da94ac0964afe91e19b18f95f7f772020-11-25T02:20:09ZengEconJournalsInternational Journal of Economics and Financial Issues2146-41382016-04-01624204261032An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging EconomiesMohammed UmarJauhari DahalanThe paper employs asymmetric causality test based on Toda-Yamamoto (1995) causality approach to further investigate the causal relationship between exchange rate and inflation differentials in Brunei, Malaysia and Singapore. We simulate critical values based on leverage bootstrapping and asymmetric causality test from the underlying empirical data. The results are compared among the Granger asymptotic chi-square, the MWALD leverage bootstrapped distributions and asymmetric causality test. The reported conflicting findings proved the existence of size distortion and nuisance parameter estimates when the traditional Granger approach is applied. The results from Toda-Yamamoto with asymmetric causality test establish the existence of Granger causality running from positive cumulative exchange rate shocks to positive cumulative shocks in inflation differentials for Brunei and Malaysia. However, the asymmetric causality for Singapore runs from both positive and negative cumulative domestic inflation shocks to positive and negative exchange rate shocks respectively. The policy implication of the findings is that a strong price stabilization policy during both good and bad times can stabilize exchange rate fluctuations in Singapore whereas; formulation of effective exchange rate policy can only achieve price stability in Brunei and Malaysia during good period.https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/ijefi/issue/31978/352456?publisher=http-www-cag-edu-tr-ilhan-ozturkasymmetric causality leverage bootstrap toda-yamamoto exchange rate structural break
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed Umar
Jauhari Dahalan
spellingShingle Mohammed Umar
Jauhari Dahalan
An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging Economies
International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
asymmetric causality
leverage bootstrap
toda-yamamoto
exchange rate
structural break
author_facet Mohammed Umar
Jauhari Dahalan
author_sort Mohammed Umar
title An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging Economies
title_short An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging Economies
title_full An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging Economies
title_fullStr An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging Economies
title_full_unstemmed An Application of Asymmetric Toda-Yamamoto Causality on Exchange Rate-Inflation Differentials in Emerging Economies
title_sort application of asymmetric toda-yamamoto causality on exchange rate-inflation differentials in emerging economies
publisher EconJournals
series International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
issn 2146-4138
publishDate 2016-04-01
description The paper employs asymmetric causality test based on Toda-Yamamoto (1995) causality approach to further investigate the causal relationship between exchange rate and inflation differentials in Brunei, Malaysia and Singapore. We simulate critical values based on leverage bootstrapping and asymmetric causality test from the underlying empirical data. The results are compared among the Granger asymptotic chi-square, the MWALD leverage bootstrapped distributions and asymmetric causality test. The reported conflicting findings proved the existence of size distortion and nuisance parameter estimates when the traditional Granger approach is applied. The results from Toda-Yamamoto with asymmetric causality test establish the existence of Granger causality running from positive cumulative exchange rate shocks to positive cumulative shocks in inflation differentials for Brunei and Malaysia. However, the asymmetric causality for Singapore runs from both positive and negative cumulative domestic inflation shocks to positive and negative exchange rate shocks respectively. The policy implication of the findings is that a strong price stabilization policy during both good and bad times can stabilize exchange rate fluctuations in Singapore whereas; formulation of effective exchange rate policy can only achieve price stability in Brunei and Malaysia during good period.
topic asymmetric causality
leverage bootstrap
toda-yamamoto
exchange rate
structural break
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/ijefi/issue/31978/352456?publisher=http-www-cag-edu-tr-ilhan-ozturk
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