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One date, one break?

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-07-12, 14:24 authored by Michail Karoglou, Panicos O. Demetriades, Siong Hook Law
This paper demonstrates that the conventional approach of using official liberalisation dates as the only existing breakdates could lead to inaccurate conclusions as to the effect of the underlying liberalisation policies. It also proposes an alternative paradigm for obtaining more robust estimates of volatility changes around official liberalisation dates and/or other important market events. By focusing on five East Asian emerging markets, all of which liberalised their financial markets in the late, and by using recent advances in the econometrics of structural change, it shows that (i) the detected breakdates in the volatility of stock market returns can be dramatically different to official liberalisation dates and (ii) the use of official liberalisation dates as breakdates can readily entail inaccurate inference. In contrast, the use of data-driven techniques for the detection of multiple structural changes leads to a richer and inevitably more accurate pattern of volatility evolution emerges in comparison with focussing on official liberalisation dates.

History

Citation

Empirical Economics, 2011, 41 (1), pp. 7-24.

Published in

Empirical Economics

Publisher

Springer Verlag

issn

0377-7332

Available date

2011-07-12

Publisher version

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00181-010-0436-x

Notes

This is the author's final draft of the paper published as Empirical Economics, 2011, 41 (1), pp. 7-24. The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com. DOI: 10.1007/s00181-010-0436-x

Language

en

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