Abstract

This paper studies the behavior of the real exchange rate in Brazil over the longest possible period for which data are available: 1855–1990. Does the real exchange rate follow a random walk or does it revert to its mean, possibly nonstationary, level? The evidence is mixed. Formal tests can not reject the hypothesis of nonstationary behavior, although the judgement is borderline. However, time-series identification favors a stationary interpretation, and simple autoregressive processes for the real exchange rate yield extremely robust and satisfactory estimates.

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