Seminar Title: Financial Integration in Asia
Presented by Dr Shawn Leu, UNE Business School
The UNEBS R&RT Committee cordially invites you to attend to the next seminar. The session will be held on Friday 24th July in Lecture Theatre 5, W39 in EBL Building at 10:30AM.
Abstract
We estimate a FAVAR model to evaluate the degree of financial integration in Asia. Integration is assumed to be driven by one unobservable regional index factor that measures intra-regional integration within the Asian countries, and four observable country factors that measure inter-regional integration with the Asian region. The unobservable regional index factor is extracted by Kalman filter. We performed forecast error variance decomposition to examine the sources of integration forces with the Asian interest rates. The main findings are that the majority of the interest rate commonality is driven by inter-regional integration where the US and EU are the two dominant factors. For Indonesia, however, Japan is the largest contributor to explaining its interest rate variability. There is limited intra-regional integration as indicated by the contribution from the regional factor and China also accounts for a rather small share of interest rate movements. When we focus on the post-2002 period, the contributions from the regional and China factors become increasingly important. Although the increase is small and the explanatory power remains modest.
Shawn Leu is senior lecturer of macroeconomics at UNE. His research interests are in applied macroeconometrics, open economy macroeconomics, monetary economics, and international finance. His current research projects include examining: (1) the international spillover effects and regional integration; (2) the impacts of capital flows, terms of trade movements, and currency fluctuations in developing economies; and (3) labour market rigidity in G7 countries. He has held visiting positions at the International Monetary Fund, Macquarie University, and the University of Cincinnati.
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