Volume 8, Issue 1 March 2012

Is Exchange Rate Stabilization an Appropriate Cure for the Dutch Disease?

Abstract

This paper evaluates how successful a policy of exchange rate stabilization is in counteracting the negative effects of a Dutch disease episode. We consider a small open-economy model that incorporates nominal rigidities and a learning-by-doing externality in the tradable sector. The paper shows that leaning against an appreciated exchange rate can prevent an inefficient loss of tradable output but at the cost of generating a misallocation of resources in other sectors of the economy. The paper also finds that welfare is a decreasing function of exchange rate intervention. These results suggest that stabilizing the nominal exchange rate in response to a Dutch disease episode could be highly distortionary.

Authors

  • Ruy Lama
  • Juan Pablo Medina

JEL codes

  • E52
  • F31
  • F41

Other papers in this issue

Michael D. Bordo and Owen F. Humpage and Anna J. Schwartz

Donald Coletti and Michael B. Devereux and Andrew Levin and Carl E. Walsh and John C. Williams