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Dissertations, Theses and Plan B Papers -- Abstract
Asuming-Brempong, Samuel.
Ghana: Exchange Rate Reforms and The Real Exchange Rate.
Plan B Paper,
1998.
Major Professor: Staatz.
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The dual purpose of the exchange rate (the price of a unit of foreign currency)
as a means of allocating scarce foreign currency among competing uses and an
important determinant of income distribution through its influence on the returns
to those who produce or consume treadables, makes it a prime target as a policy
tool, as has been experienced in Ghana. This paper addresses issues of exchange
rate management in Ghana in both the pre- and post-independence periods, and
how these have affected both micro and macro economic variables. It provides
an overview of exchange rate reforms in Ghana over the period since Ghana attained
independence from Britain in 1957; and investigates the factors that are most
important in determining the real exchange rate in Ghana. The paper finds current
transfers and real money supply to be very important in determining Ghana's real
exchange rate, inter alia. In terms of policy, it finds that nominal exchange
rate reform by itself alone is not a panacea for addressing distortions in an
economy and promoting economic growth.