Foreign reserve accumulation and the mercantilist motive hypothesis
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Carvalho, Patrick
Fry-McKibbin, Renee A.
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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University
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A fivefold increase in central bank foreign reserves across the globe over the past fifteen years has prompted the question of whether this constitutes a new form of mercantilism. According to this view, countries accumulate foreign reserves in order to support export promotion by influencing exchange rates and/or to signal relative economic strength as a modern version of bullionism. Using a unique dataset on daily foreign exchange intervention, this paper investigates the mercantilist motive hypothesis for the case of Brazil over the period 2009-2012. The findings support reserve accumulation as a byproduct of successful central bank intervention in the Brazilian foreign exchange market. The results also indicate regional currency intervention spillovers to Brazil's neighbouring countries, including on their foreign reserve build-ups.
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Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis Working Papers
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