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Currencies in Turbulence: Exploring the Impact of Natural Disasters on Exchange Rates

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  • Anh Thi Ngoc Nguyen
  • Ha Nguyen

Abstract

This paper investigates the impact of natural disasters on exchange rate movements in different country groups with different exchange rate regimes. Using a panel local projection model with a high-frequency monthly dataset of 177 countries during 1970M1-2019M12, we find that exchange rate movements are more sensitive to natural disasters in emerging markets and developing countries (EMDEs) than in advanced economies (AEs). Furthermore, exchange rate reactions to natural shocks depend on exchange rate regimes adopted by EMDEs. On average, both nominal and real exchange rates could depreciate up to 6 percents two years after the disasters in non-pegged regimes. Our findings suggest that EMDEs with flexible exchange rate regimes would observe a faster recovery through nominal and real depreciations, although they should be mindful about policy implications that may arise from large exchange rate fluctuations caused by natural disaster shocks.

Suggested Citation

  • Anh Thi Ngoc Nguyen & Ha Nguyen, 2024. "Currencies in Turbulence: Exploring the Impact of Natural Disasters on Exchange Rates," IMF Working Papers 2024/186, International Monetary Fund.
  • Handle: RePEc:imf:imfwpa:2024/186
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