Russian Federation: Selected Issues
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Summary:
This paper focuses on the task that may be more complicated when the adjustment in relative prices is driven by a negative terms of trade (ToT) shock. Two sets of factors are explored: disruptiveness of sudden terms-of-trade driven devaluations and issues related to external demand and access to external markets. The argument that a reduction in commodity prices will unwind the Dutch disease assumes symmetry: since increasing commodity prices drove resources out of the non-commodity tradable sector, decreasing commodity prices and ensuing real depreciation should bring resources back into the nontradable sector. Effectively, this implies that the magnitude of the elasticity of non-commodity exports to the real effective exchange rate (REER) is equal regardless of the direction of the REER movement, and is not affected by the phase of the commodity cycle. Deep linkages between the commodity and non-commodity sectors can prevent the non-commodity tradable sector from taking advance of the depreciation caused by a commodity price shock because such depreciation puts under stress the entire economy.
Series:
Country Report No. 2017/198
Subject:
Exports Fiscal federalism Fiscal policy Fiscal rules Inflation International trade Oil prices Prices
English
Publication Date:
July 10, 2017
ISBN/ISSN:
9781484308202/1934-7685
Stock No:
1RUSEA2017002
Pages:
94
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