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No. wp2019-07   (Download at EconPapers)
Juan Carlos Cuestas
On the evolution of competitiveness in Central and Eastern Europe: is it broken?
In this paper we aim to analyse the evolution of the real exchange rate (RER) as a measure of competitiveness for a group of Central and Eastern European countries. To do so, we apply unit root tests with breaks and estimate equations with structural breaks. The results show that even though RERs have become flatter, which means less competitiveness is lost against main trading partners, they have become less mean reverting, meaning that shocks now tend to have longer effects. Policy conclusions are derived from this analysis
JEL-Codes: C22, F15
Keywords: real exchange rates, Central and Eastern Europe, structural breaks, European integration
No. wp2019-06   (Download at EconPapers)
Merike Kukk and Natalia Levenko
Macroeconomic imbalances and loan quality in panels of European countries
The paper investigates the relationship between loan quality and macroeconomic imbalance indicators. We use the local projection method to estimate the response of non-performing loans (NPL) to changes in the cyclical component of macroeconomic factors. The estimations are run for three country groups of Western European countries, Central and Eastern European countries, and Southern European countries. The results show that a rise in the output gap is followed by a rise in NPL in all country groups, while NPL responds to the unemployment rate in the Central and Eastern and Southern European countries. Inflation and real unit labour costs are positively related to NPL in all country groups, though they are estimated with large uncertainty in some country groups. The findings suggest that it is useful to monitor imbalances in the output gap, unemployment, inflation and labour costs together with credit indicators to assess the ensuing dynamics in NPL.
JEL-Codes: E32, E44, G21, P52
Keywords: non-performing loans, macroeconomic imbalances, cyclical component, local projection method, unit labour costs
No. wp2019-05   (Download at EconPapers)
Jaanika Merikull and Tairi Room
Are survey data underestimating the inequality of wealth?
This paper uses administrative data from registers and survey data from interviews to analyse unit and item non-response in a wealth survey. It draws on the Estonian Household Finance and Consumption Survey dataset, where the survey data on income and wealth are complemented by information on the same variables from administrative sources for all the people sampled. The results show that the non-response contributes to the underestimation of wealth inequality in the survey data, as the Gini coefficient is underestimated by 6 percentage points and also the top wealth shares are substantially underestimated. The downward bias is originating from item non-response and not from unit non-response. Imputation can address the problems caused by item non-response across most of the net wealth distribution, but does not eliminate the downward bias at the top of the wealth distribution.
JEL-Codes: D31, E21
Keywords: wealth distribution, unit non-response, item non-response, participation bias, wealth survey, income survey, Household Finance and Consumption Survey, Estonia
No. wp2019-04   (Download at EconPapers)
Jaanika Merikull, Merike Kukk and Tairi Room
What explains the gender gap in wealth? Evidence from administrative data
This paper studies the gender gap in net wealth. We use administrative data on wealth that are linked to the Estonian Household Finance and Consumption Survey, which provides individual-level wealth data for all household types. We find that the unconditional gender gap in mean wealth is 45% and that it is caused by large wealth disparities in the upper end of the wealth distribution. The structure of assets owned by men is more diversified than that for women. Men own more business assets and vehicles, while women own more deposits. The gender gaps in these asset components cannot be explained by observable characteristics. For partner-headed households the raw gender gaps across deciles are mostly in favour of men, and more strongly so for married couples, indicating that resources are not entirely pooled within households. For single-member households the raw gaps across quantiles are partially in favour of women. Accounting for observable characteristics renders the unexplained parts of the gaps mostly insignificant for all household types
JEL-Codes: D31, J16, J71
Keywords: gender gap, wealth, inequality, intra-household allocation of wealth, Estonia
No. wp2019-03   (Download at EconPapers)
Juan Carlos Cuestas, Nicolas Reigl and Yannick Lucotte
The evolution and heterogeneity of credit procyclicality in Central and Eastern Europe
This paper presents empirical estimates of bank credit procyclicality for a sample of 11 Central and Eastern Europe countries (CEECs) for the period 2000Q1–2016Q4. In the first step we estimate a traditional-type panel VAR model and analyse the evolution of credit procyclicality in the CEECs by comparing the impulse response functions for different business cycle periods. The results confirm the existence of credit procyclicality in CEECs and show that procyclicality is higher during boom periods. Furthermore we observe the heterogeneity of credit procyclicality in the different countries in our sample. To explain the cross-country heterogeneity in credit procyclicality we construct an interacted panel VAR model (IPVAR) and analyse whether bank level competition, proxied by the aggregate Lerner index, constitutes a driving force of credit procyclicality. Our findings indicate that bank competition affects credit procyclicality and explains the differences in credit dynamics across CEECs. Specifically we show that the reaction of credit to a GDP shock is on average higher in a less competitive banking market.
JEL-Codes: E32, E51, G20, D40, C33
Keywords: credit cycle, business cycle, bank competition, interacted panel VAR, CEEC
No. wp2019-02   (Download at EconPapers)
Thomas Y. Mathä, Stephen Millard and Tairi Room
Shocks and labour cost adjustment: evidence from a survey of European firms
We use firm-level survey data from 25 EU countries to analyse how firms adjust their labour costs (employment, wages and hours) in response to shocks. We develop a theoretical model to understand how firms choose between different ways to adjust their labour costs. The basic intuition is that firms choose the cheapest way to adjust labour costs. Our empirical findings are in line with the theoretical model and show that the pattern of adjustment is not much affected by the type of the shock (demand shock, access-to-finance shock, “availability of supplies” shock), but differs according to the direction of the shock (positive or negative), its size and persistence. In 2010–2013, firms responding to negative shocks were most likely to reduce employment, then hourly wages and then hours worked, regardless of the source of the shock. Results for the 2008–2009 period indicate that the ranking might change during deep recession as the likelihood of wage cuts increases. In response to positive shocks in 2010–2013, firms were more likely to increase wages, followed by increases in employment and then hours worked suggesting an asymmetric reaction to positive and negative shocks. Finally, we show that strict employment protection legislation and high centralisation or coordination of wage bargaining make it less likely that firms reduce wages when facing negative shocks.
JEL-Codes: D21, D22, D24
Keywords: shocks, firms, labour cost adjustment, wages, employment, hours, survey
No. wp2019-01   (Download at EconPapers)
Jacopo Bonchi
Asset price bubbles with low interest rates: not all bubbles are alike
I extend a standard two-period OLG model to investigate the interplay between the risks of a binding zero lower bound and asset price bubbles in a low interest rates environment. The nature of the bubble is crucial when the risk-free real interest rate is low because there is a negative natural interest rate. Bubbles are fully leveraged when they are sustained by borrowers, or they are fully unleveraged when they are sustained by lenders. Leveraged bubbles emerge naturally when there is a negative natural interest rate, and they are more likely to collapse. Unleveraged bubbles appear, in contrast, if the natural rate of interest is extremely low and the probability of the bubble bursting is not extremely high. Both bubbles are more likely to emerge with a high inflation target and will potentially be larger, but only leveraged bubbles substantially mitigate the risk of a zero lower bound episode by raising the natural rate of interest
JEL-Codes: E43, E44, E52
Keywords: zero lower bound, low interest rates, asset price bubbles, inflation target
No. wp2018-10   (Download at EconPapers)
Tibor Lalinsky and Jaanika Merikull
The effect of the single currency on exports: comparative firm-level evidence
We investigate how adopting the euro affects exports using firm-level data from Slovakia and Estonia. In contrast to previous studies, we focus on countries that adopted the euro individually and had different exchange rate regimes prior to doing so. Following the New Trade Theory we consider three types of adjustment: firm selection, changes in product varieties and changes in the average value of the exports that compose the exports of individual firms. The euro effect is identified by a difference in differences analysis comparing exports by firms to the euro area countries with exports to the EU countries that are not members of the euro area. The results highlight the importance of the transaction costs channel related to exchange rate volatility. We find the euro has a strong pro-trade effect in Slovakia, which switched to the euro from a floating exchange rate, while it has almost no effect in Estonia, which had a fixed exchange rate to the euro prior to the euro changeover. Our findings indicate that the euro effect manifested itself mainly through the intensive margin and that the gains in trade were heterogeneous across firm characteristics.
JEL-Codes: F14, F15
Keywords: international trade, common currency areas, euro adoption, transaction costs, Slovakia, Estonia, firm-level data
No. wp2018-09   (Download at EconPapers)
Natalia Levenko
Actual and perceived uncertainty as drivers of household saving
JEL-Codes: E12, E21, E24
Keywords: household saving rates, European Union, financial crisis, labour income uncertainty, precautionary saving, unemployment, consumer expectations, system GMM
No. wp2018-08   (Download at EconPapers)
Kersti Harkmann and Karsten Staehr
Current account dynamics and exchange rate regimes in Central and Eastern Europe
The paper seeks to determine the factors that drive the current account dynamics of the 11 EU members from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). Panel data models are estimated on annual data for the period 1997–2017 and both domestic pull factors and external push factors are included. The models are, as a key innovation, estimated separately for floating and fixed exchange rate regimes. The current account exhibits substantial persistence in both cases. For the floaters, the current account has been driven by domestic factors while external factors appear unimportant. For the fixers, the current account has mainly been driven by external factors, suggesting there is substantial vulnerability to external developments. The analysis underscores the importance of the exchange rate regime for the drivers of the current account balance in the CEE countries.
JEL-Codes: F32, F33, P33
Keywords: current account balance, exchange rate regime, economic policies, Central and Eastern Europe
No. wp2018-07   (Download at EconPapers)
Nicolas Reigl and Lenno Uuskula
Alternative frameworks for measuring credit gaps and setting countercyclical capital buffers
This paper complements the standard Basel countercyclical capital buffer framework by suggesting four additional measures for credit gaps that can be used to measure the financial cycle and to decide on countercyclical capital buffers for banks. The new measures behave similarly to the gaps calculated with the standard Basel one-sided Hodrick-Prescott filter in long samples, but they have the properties desired for countries with relatively short historical samples. While the standard Basel credit gaps have been deep in negative territory for many European Union countries since the Great Recession the new gaps are close to zero and the buffers suggested are more in line with the countercyclical capital buffer ratios that were in place in 2018.
JEL-Codes: G01, E59
Keywords: credit gaps, countercyclical capital buffer, Basel III, Estonia
No. wp2018-06   (Download at EconPapers)
Juan Carlos Cuestas
Changes in sovereign debt dynamics in Central and Eastern Europe
The aim of this paper is to shed some light on the degree of sustainability of fiscal debt for a group of Central and Eastern European countries. We apply a battery of time series econometrics methods to show how the financial crisis has affected the debt-to-GDP ratio and how the ratio has behaved recently. The results give us important insights into how governments in Central and Eastern Europe have reacted to the accumulation of debt. We distinguish between two groups of countries; one group where the sovereign debt stock stabilised after the crisis, and another where debt has been accumulated more quickly in recent years. The results provide important policy lessons for the authorities responsible
JEL-Codes: C22, F15
Keywords: Central and Eastern Europe, structural breaks, European integration
No. wp2018-05   (Download at EconPapers)
Juan Carlos Cuestas, Estefania Mourelle and Paulo José Regis
Real exchange rate misalignments in CEECs: have they hindered growth?
We study the impact of exchange rate misalignment on economic activity in nine Central and Eastern European (CEE) economies. Exchange rate misalignments are computed from country-specific long-run exchange rate relationships with determinants suggested by open macroeconomic models such as interest rate differentials or the Balassa-Samuelson effect. There was a clear reduction in misalignments, but this has been reversed to some extent after 2008. Exchange rate overvaluation has a negative impact on economic activity. The effect of misalignments on economic activity seems to be nonlinear, as overvaluation has a stronger effect than undervaluation. Other factors of economic activity, including institutions, also show nonlinear effects
JEL-Codes: O11, F41, F15
Keywords: real exchange rate misalignments, growth, Central and Eastern European countries, panel smooth transition regression
No. wp2018-04   (Download at EconPapers)
Merike Kukk, Alari Paulus and Karsten Staehr
Income underreporting by the self-employed in Europe: a cross-country comparative study
This study is the first to provide comparative estimates of the extent of income underreporting by the self-employed across countries in Europe. The estimates are derived using the consumption method developed by Pissarides & Weber (1989) and the data from the 2010 wave of the harmonised EU Household Budget Survey. The estimations show that the share of income not reported by the selfemployed is relatively large in many European countries, although with substantial variation across the countries. There is some regional clustering, but the shares of underreporting appear not to be related to the development level of the countries. The results are robust to changes in the model specification, the estimation method, and the choice of instruments, but are somewhat sensitive to sample restrictions and the criterion used to define self-employed households
JEL-Codes: H26, E21, E26, H24
Keywords: ncome underreporting, self-employment, EU countries, household budget surveys