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Journal ArticleDOI

The Endogenity of the Optimum Currency Area Criteria

Jeffrey A. Frankel, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1998 - 
- Vol. 108, Iss: 449, pp 1009-1025
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TLDR
This paper investigated the relationship between international trade patterns and international business cycle correlations and found that countries with closer trade links tend to have more tightly correlated business cycles, while countries with weaker trade links tended to have weaker business cycles.
Abstract
A country' suitability for entry into a currency union depends on a number of economic conditions. These include, inter alia, the intensity of trade with other potential members of the currency union, and the extent to which domestic business cycles are correlated with those of the other countries. But international trade patterns and international business cycle correlations are endogenous. This paper develops and investigates the relationship between the two phenomena. Using thirty years of data for twenty industrialised countries, we uncover a strong and striking empirical finding: countries with closer trade links tend to have more tightly correlated business cycles.

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The Institutional Dynamics of International Political Orders

TL;DR: The authors argue that the tendency of students of international political order to emphasize efficient histories and consequential bases for action leads them to underestimate the significance of rule-and identity-based action and inefficient histories.
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The determinants of cross-border equity flows

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore a new panel data set on bilateral gross cross-border equity flows between 14 countries, 1989-1996, and show that a "gravity" model explains international transactions in financial assets at least as well as goods trade transactions.
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What Makes the World Hang Together? Neo-utilitarianism and the Social Constructivist Challenge

TL;DR: Social constructivism addresses many of the same issues addressed by neo-utilitarianism, though from a different vantage and, therefore, with different effect as discussed by the authors. But it also concerns itself with issues that neo-UTilitarianism treats by assumption, discounts, ignores, or simply cannot apprehend within its characteristic ontology and/or epistemology.
ReportDOI

One Money, One Market: Estimating the Effect of Common Currencies on Trade

TL;DR: In this paper, a gravity model is used to asses the separate effects of exchange rate volatility and currency unions on international trade, finding that two countries that share the same currency trade three times as much as the same countries would with different currencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

National Money as a Barrier to International Trade: The Real Case for Currency Union

TL;DR: This paper argued that the benefits of trade created by currency union may swamp any costs of forgoing independent monetary policy, since national money seems to be a significant barrier to international trade in the data.