1. How Useful Is an Asian Currency Unit (ACU) Index for Surveillance in East Asia?
- Author
-
Victor Pontines
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Index (economics) ,Flagging ,jel:F31 ,Beggar thy neighbour ,Monetary economics ,jel:F41 ,Asian Currency Unit (ACU) index, intra-regional exchange rate, finnacial surveillance ,Unit (housing) ,International capital ,Exchange rate ,jel:F15 ,Economy ,Currency ,asian currency unit ,acu index ,amro ,acu deviation indicator ,beggar-thy-neighbor ,Economics ,Portfolio ,East Asia ,Business - Abstract
An Asian Currency Unit (ACU) index is constructed using an alternative procedure which minimizes a basket or portfolio of assets expressed in terms of national currencies. Using this estimated ACU index and an ACU Deviation Indicator, the main finding of this study based on the current trajectory of East Asian currencies relative to this regional ACU average or benchmark is that there is a formation of two contrasting groups of countries in the region—one a group of strong currencies and the other a group of weak currencies. We emphasize that the implication of this contrasting trajectory in East Asian intra-regional exchange rates is to disturb the competitive trading relationships in the region which may result in wasteful beggar-thyneighbor policies in the region. As emphasized by other recent studies, e.g., Kawai and Takagi (2012), the region needs a kind of framework for exchange rate policy coordination that will promote intra-regional exchange rate stability. We suggest several ways in which the region can capitalize on using this ACU index in the immediate term for surveillance purposes, particularly, for purposes of assessing “over- and undervaluation†of the individual currencies from the regional ACU average and for flagging emerging vulnerabilities in individual economies in the region.
- Published
- 2013