Publication: Determinants of Exchange Rate: Evidence from Sri Lanka
DOI
Type:
Thesis
Date
2020
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Abstract
This present research investigated the modelling of exchange rate volatility of USD/LKR and
analyses whether macroeconomic factors could influence the exchange rate. A combination of
Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) and Autoregressive Conditional
Heteroskedasticity (ARCH) family models were used to model the exchange rate volatility. The
most suitable model was determined based on the maximum likelihood criterion. To explore the
presence of dynamic short-run and long-run relationships, and the impact of macroeconomic
variables on the exchange rate was analyzed using the ARDL model. The empirical findings
indicate that the most appropriate statistically significant model for volatility is ARIMA (1,0,0)-
ARCH (1). The ARDL model suggested that a long-run relationship between the macroeconomic
variables and the exchange rate does not exist. In contrast, a short-run relationship exists between
exchange rate lag one, exchange rate lag two, inflation, Merchandising trade balance. Thereby, we
suggest that improving the merchandising trade balance and minimizing inflation could minimize
volatility in the exchange rate. The practical implications inferred from this study could influence
all stakeholders exposed to foreign exchange volatility, including policymakers, importers,
exporters, and financial institutions. The contribution of this research considered the most recent
economic phenomena of Sri Lanka and used Gross official reserve as a variable that was not used
earlier in Sri Lankan studies.
Description
Keywords
Exchange Rate, Volatility, GARCH, ARIMA, ARDL
