American Economic Review
ISSN 0002-8282 (Print) | ISSN 1944-7981 (Online)
Effective Exchange Rates and the Classical Gold Standard Adjustment
American Economic Review
vol. 95,
no. 4, September 2005
(pp. 1259–1275)
Abstract
Using a new international dataset of trade-weighed exchange rates, this paper highlights a neglected adjustment mechanism in the classical gold standard literature. Since gold-pegged countries traded extensively with economies operating more flexible monetary regimes and where parity change was a common adjustment device to systemic shocks, we show that such parity adjustments induced worldwide swings in nominal effective exchange rates. These translated into real exchange rate variations to which trade balances responded with an average elasticity of unity and in the direction of restoring external disequilibria. We conclude that some nominal exchange rate flexibility thus present in the pre-1914 system was instrumental to international payments adjustment.Citation
Catão, Luis, A. V., and Solomos N. Solomou. 2005. "Effective Exchange Rates and the Classical Gold Standard Adjustment." American Economic Review, 95 (4): 1259–1275. DOI: 10.1257/0002828054825565Additional Materials
JEL Classification
- F31 Foreign Exchange
- N10 Economic History: Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics; Industrial Structure; Growth; Fluctuations: General, International, or Comparative