Research Paper

Domestic Consumption and Uncertainty of Exchange Rate in a Monetary Union: Evidence From The Euro Area

SO

Samuel N. Okafor

okaforsam@gmail.com

JL

Juste S. Lokossou

Journal Information

Journal

The European Journal of Applied Economics

Volume / Issue

Vol. 18, No. 1 (2021)

Pages

151–172

Published

08 March 2020

DOI

10.5937/EJAE18-28714

Abstract

The research seeks to uncover how real consumption reacts to real exchange rate uncertainty in the short and long run for the world’s largest monetary union- the euro zone. Twelve euro zone countries were sampled covering the period 1995Q1-2019Q4. Using generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) and pooled mean group (PMG), the result shows that exchange rate uncertainty significantly dampens long-run consumption while the short-run effect is mixed. In the benchmark model, a negative and significant error correction coefficient was obtained, which allows to argue that i) there is evidence of a return to the long-run equilibrium path for consumption following short run deviations and ii) the speed of adjustment to equilibrium is low, with a coefficient of ~ 4%. This suggests that, in the euro zone, convergence to long-run equilibrium is slow, as the proportion of disequilibrium corrected in one quarter, following a shock, is about 4%, which implies it would take ~17 quarters for one half of the disequilibrium, or deviations from the long-run consumption path to become corrected.

Keywords

Monetary unioneuro zoneexchange rateconsumptionuncertaintyGARCHPMG.

Citation

Samuel N. Okafor, Juste S. Lokossou (2021). Domestic Consumption and Uncertainty of Exchange Rate in a Monetary Union: Evidence From The Euro Area The European Journal of Applied Economics. 18(1) 151–172. DOI: 10.5937/EJAE18-28714