Responsiveness of Trade Flows to Changes in Exchange rate and Relative prices: Evidence from Nigeria
Date
2010
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Eastern Macedonia and Thrace Institute of Technology
Abstract
This paper examines the long-run and short-run impacts of exchange rate and price changes
on trade flows in Nigeria using exports and imports functions. The bounds testing (ARDL)
approach to cointegration is applied on a quarterly data from 1980Q1 to 2007Q4. The results
indicate that in both the short-run and long-run Nigeria’s trade flows are chiefly influenced
by income- both domestic and foreign-, relative prices, nominal effective exchange rates and
the stock of external reserves. The results also reveal that in the long-run, devaluation is more
effective than relative prices in altering imports demand at both baseline and augmented
models. The reverse is, however, the case for exports demand. Furthermore, the sum of the
estimated price elasticities of export and import demand in Nigeria exceeds unity indicating
that the Marshall-Lerner (ML) condition holds thus implying that a devalued naira might
hold considerable promise as the panacea to rising trade deficits.
Description
Keywords
Trade flows, Exchange rate, Relative prices, Autoregressive distributed lag
