Oil Price Volatility And US Dollar Exchange Rate Volatility Of Some Oil-Dependent Economies
Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Journal of International Trade & Economic Development
Abstract
This paper examines the relationship and related causality patterns of oil price volatility and exchange rate volatility of a group of oil-dependent economies before and
after the 2008–2009 global financial crisis. We employed weekly time-series data of oil
price and exchange rates for 2000–2007 (pre-crisis) and 2010–2016 (post-crisis). United
States dollar exchange rates are for Ghanaian cedi, Nigerian naira, Russian ruble, Indian
rupee, South African rand, and the Euro. To investigate the volatility impacts that exist
between oil price and exchange rates during both sub-sample periods, we merged
Vector Autoregressive (VAR) with GARCH and EGARCH models in the form of bivariate VAR-GARCH and VAR-EGARCH. We further adopted the Toda-Yamamoto causality
test to investigate related causality patterns. Empirical findings revealed both a bilateral and unidirectional relationship between oil price volatility and exchange rates
volatility of four out of the six oil-dependent economies considered for the study. These
findings were more prevalent in the post-crisis period than the pre-crisis period. We
also confirmed both bidirectional and unidirectional causality pattern between oil price
volatility and exchange rate volatility of the same four currencies as observed with the
VAR results in both sub-sample periods
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Oil price, exchange rate, oil-dependent