2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1813-6982.2007.00130.x
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On the Rand: Determinants of the South African Exchange Rate

Abstract: This paper is an econometric investigation of the determinants of the real value of the South African rand over the period 1984-2007. The results show a relatively good fit. As always with exchange rate equations, there is substantial weight on the lagged exchange rate, which can be attributed to a momentum component. Nevertheless, economic fundamentals are significant and important. This is especially true of an index of the real prices of South African mineral commodities, which even drives out real income a… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Considering that we do not use the lagged exchange rate as an explanatory variable, the in‐sample fit is very high [for comparison, see, e.g. Frankel ()]. Notice that the actual metical‐dollar exchange rate is smoother than the rate given by the estimated regression parameters.…”
Section: Regression Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering that we do not use the lagged exchange rate as an explanatory variable, the in‐sample fit is very high [for comparison, see, e.g. Frankel ()]. Notice that the actual metical‐dollar exchange rate is smoother than the rate given by the estimated regression parameters.…”
Section: Regression Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, the repurchase rate is determined by the Reserve Bank in order to restrict inflation to within the current target range of 3% to 6%. The turn of the century also brought with it a sharp real depreciation in the rand from 1999 to 2002 due to a decline in mineral exports, followed by a substantial real appreciation precipitated by the natural resource boom between 2002 and 2006 [15]. These movements in the exchange rate are reflected in the bottom panel of Figure 1.…”
Section: Data Issues and Methodological Approach 31 Time Periodmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Further currency crises occurred in October 1996, November 1997 and April 1998, triggered largely by contagion effects from the Asian crisis and a fall in the price of gold and other metals [15]. Following the April 1998 crisis, the exchange rate was around 40% below its average value between the elections in 1994 and the first crisis in 1995.…”
Section: Data Issues and Methodological Approach 31 Time Periodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Worse, when making statements about the value of the rand, policy-makers assume that they "know" the equilibrium value of the exchange rate. However, the latter continues to be a source of substantial disagreement among macroeconometricians (see In fact, Frenkel (2007) provides econometric evidence that the recent appreciation of the rand is consistent with its past behaviour, noting that the evidence is not "in favor of the proposition that the rand was overvalued (as of early 2007) when judged by its own past relationship to economic fundamentals".…”
Section: A Weaker Rand Is Not a Panacea -And Exchange Rate Targeting mentioning
confidence: 99%