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    Three essays on monetary and international economics
    (Social Sciences, 2017-08) Song, Mengdi; Cobham, Professor David P.; Christev, Assistant Professor Atanas
    This thesis comprises three essays on monetary and international economics. The first essay studies two issues of countries’ exchange rate regime (ERR) choices: why countries peg and, if they peg, how they choose their anchor currency. Using spatial analysis, I found that countries are likely to follow the ERR of “neighbouring” countries, and countries’ ERR are jointly determined by network effects and country-specific factors. The findings indicate that countries may achieve higher welfare by jointly choosing their ERRs with their major partners through cooperation and negotiation. In the second essay, I am trying to answer the question why countries target the particular variables they target by studying the determinants of countries’ monetary policy regimes (MPRs). The study focuses on original OECD member countries, and I develop a chronology of countries’ de jure MPRs for early OECD member countries for the post-Bretton Woods period. I also study the determinants of countries’ monetary policy arrangements based on de facto analysis with Cobham’s (2015) classification as the cross-reference. The results suggest that economic size, trade openness, financial development and political environment all have a role in determining the MPR. The third essay studies two main by-products of financial integration: contagion and risk sharing. I set up a Huggett (1993) type heterogeneous agent model with different types of countries, and try to fill the gap in the literature by exploring the impact of financial integration on consumers with different wealth status. The main findings indicate that lenders and borrowers in countries with current account surpluses and deficits respond to the financial crisis asymmetrically. Moreover, the relationship between financial integration and consumption smoothing is not monotonic, indicating that there is a trade-off between the benefits of international risk sharing and the costs of financial contagion induced by unexpected negative shocks as observed in recent history.
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