Currency Undervaluation and Comparative Advantage
This paper highlights a tradeoff implied by a policy of export-led growth through currency undervaluation. While undervaluation can foster domestic manufacturing in countries like China by sustaining trade surplus, it also can harm a country’s comparative advantage by altering the composition of exports. Undervaluation may discourage specializing in high-value added manufacturing and instead favor specialization in non-differentiated goods with higher price elasticity. A dynamic general equilibrium model of two traded good sectors and capital account restrictions shows that undervaluation can either raise or lower welfare depending on two competing effects on comparative advantage: agglomeration versus an elasticity effect.
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Copy CitationPaul Bergin, "Currency Undervaluation and Comparative Advantage," NBER Working Paper 29699 (2022), https://doi.org/10.3386/w29699.
Published Versions
Paul R. Bergin, 2022. "Currency Undervaluation and Comparative Advantage," European Economic Review, . citation courtesy of