Přehled o publikaci
2013
The impact of exchange rate changes on inflation in the V4 countries in the process of economic transition
ŽÍDEK, Libor and Daniel NĚMECBasic information
Original name
The impact of exchange rate changes on inflation in the V4 countries in the process of economic transition
Authors
ŽÍDEK, Libor and Daniel NĚMEC
Edition
Jihlava, Proceedings of the 31st International Conference Mathematical Methods in Economics 2013, p. 1087-1092, 6 pp. 2013
Publisher
College of Polytechnics Jihlava
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Proceedings paper
Field of Study
Economics
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form
storage medium (CD, DVD, flash disk)
References:
Marked to be transferred to RIV
Yes
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14560/13:00069296
Organization
Ekonomicko-správní fakulta – Repository – Repository
ISBN
978-80-87035-76-4
UT WoS
Keywords in English
V4 countries; exchange rate pass-through; structural vector autoregression model; economic transition; inflation
Links
MUNI/A/0799/2012, interní kód Repo.
Changed: 1/9/2020 16:24, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík
Abstract
In the original language
Our contribution focuses on the role of the exchange rate changes in the V4 countries during the transition process towards a market economy. Regarding the variety of exchange rate regimes implemented in the V4 countries at the start of the economic transition, we are especially interested in the degree of exchange rate pass-through to the domestic inflation in these countries. The respective countries followed different exchange rate strategies. The fixed exchange rate regime was applied in Czechoslovakia. Crawling peg was used in Hungary and Poland. And floating and fixed exchange rate with large band were applied in the new century. We have compared the impacts of the different exchange rate regimes on the price sta-bility during the transformation process. The effects were examined using country specific SVAR models and corresponding historical shock decompositions. We found out that the exchange rate indeed played important role in the price stability but the specific impact is highly individual.