Reflection of government performance from foreign exchange market through engineered mechanism using conditional copula model

2021 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 833-847
Author(s):  
Y. A. Khan ◽  
Y. M. Chu ◽  
S. Z. Abbas

This paper investigates governments’ performance in the country. We achieved this objective differently. We employed an inverse method of assessment, with the utilization of factor copula modeling technique, to study the dependence relationship of exchange rates returns as auxiliary variables, the performance of political and army government tenures in the country in the last two decades are evaluated. Through factor analysis, common factors for the exchange rate are obtained. The analysis shows that conditioned on the common factors, the dependence amongst the elected currencies are strongly asymmetric in most of the tenures except the term of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, and condition on common factor Clayton copula demonstrating hypothesis is more suitable. However, we perceive high left tail reliance among foreign currency returns during Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz tenure, and the condition on common factor Gumbel copula molding assumption is more appropriate. We are signifying the foulest government performance in the country among all occupancies under consideration.

Author(s):  
Olena Liegostaieva

The article is devoted to the study of currency risk hedging in international business. The article notes that the international foreign exchange market is the largest and fastest growing of all world markets. The characteristic features of the international currency market are substantiated and offered. It is also noted that foreign exchange transactions provide economic ties between participants located on different sides of state borders: settlements between firms from different countries for the supply of goods and services, foreign investment, international tourism and business travel. It is determined that hedging of currency risks is the protection of funds from the unfavorable movement of exchange rates, and is carried out in fixing the current value of funds by concluding an agreement on the foreign exchange market. When hedging, the risk of exchange rate changes disappears, and this makes it possible to forecast the company's activities and see the financial result, which is not distorted by exchange rate fluctuations, which will allow you to determine product prices, calculate profits, etc. The main difference between hedging and other types of transactions is that its purpose is not to generate additional profits, but to reduce the risk of potential losses, as risk reduction is almost always necessary to pay, hedging, of course, involves additional costs. Hedging is a way to improve business planning. An enterprise wishing to use this service shall pledge the specified amount, from which losses on its positions will be deducted. In today's conditions, thanks to the foreign exchange market, there is a very reliable way to hedge currency risk. This method is to fix the current value of funds by concluding agreements in this market. With hedging, the company eliminates the risk of exchange rate fluctuations, and this allows you to forecast activities and see the financial result, which is not changed by exchange rate fluctuations. Allows you to pre-determine product prices, determine profits, etc. Thus, the principle of hedging in international business is to open a currency position in a foreign currency account for future transactions to convert funds.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 21162-21168
Author(s):  
Muchriana Mchran ◽  
Gagaring Pagalung ◽  
Harryanto . ◽  
Mediaty .

This study aims to look at the performance of Indonesian local governments by looking at social culture, politics, and administration through information technology as a moderating variable. This research was conducted in 9 regions with the object of research namely the DPRD, OPD and the community. Data collection techniques use questionnaires. The results of the study show that (1) social culture does not affect the performance of the government. (2) Accounting information technology is able to strengthen social cultural relations to government performance (3) political culture does not affect government performance. (4) Accounting information technology is able to strengthen the relationship of political culture to government performance (5) administrative culture influences government performance. (6) Accounting information technology is able to strengthen social cultural relations to government performance


1989 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 155-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond Hubbard ◽  
Stuart J. Allen

Given nuances in the computer programs, unwary researchers performing a common factor analysis on the same set of data can be expected to arrive at very different conclusions regarding the number and nature of extracted factors if they use the BMDP, as opposed to the SPSSx (or SAS), statistical software package. This is illustrated using six well-known empirical data sets from the psychology literature.


Author(s):  
Cameron Ripa ◽  
Andrew Latulippe ◽  
Hongwei Sun ◽  
Stephen Fossey ◽  
Christopher Drew

Abstract A new method of characterizing the curvature change in thermally adaptive fibers is introduced in this paper. Based on the same principle as bi-metallic strips commonly found in thermostats, multi-component polymer fibers can be created to change their geometrical form in response to a temperature change. This works by creating fibers from two or more materials that have a mismatched Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE). A temperature change leads to a change in curvature of these fibers. When fibers interact in an insulation batting structure, a temperature change leads to a thickness change in the insulation. While these fibers have visually been observed to function, there was no method to quantitatively characterize their curvature performance. This paper introduces a method that can be used to quantify fiber performance by tracking change in curvature over a specific temperature range. This is accomplished by suspending fibers on the surface of a liquid bath and changing the bath temperature. Digital images of the fiber are taken at different temperatures and analyzed using software to determine the radius of curvature. Absolute change in curvature was found to be as high as 0.5% per degree °C from 20 to −20°C for certain samples. A trend was also noted between higher initial curvature and lower overall performance. Digital image correlation was further used to investigate the time-dependence relationship of fiber curvature. Future experiments can be performed with this setup to characterize and compare curvature change performance of different fibers accurately.


Author(s):  
Marco Lippi

High-Dimensional Dynamic Factor Models have their origin in macroeconomics, precisely in empirical research on Business Cycles. The central idea, going back to the work of Burns and Mitchell in the years 1940, is that the fluctuations of all the macro and sectoral variables in the economy are driven by a “reference cycle,” that is, a one-dimensional latent cause of variation. After a fairly long process of generalization and formalization, the literature settled at the beginning of the year 2000 on a model in which (1) both n the number of variables in the dataset and T, the number of observations for each variable, may be large, and (2) all the variables in the dataset depend dynamically on a fixed independent of n, a number of “common factors,” plus variable-specific, usually called “idiosyncratic,” components. The structure of the model can be exemplified as follows: xit=αiut+βiut−1+ξit,i=1,…,n,t=1,…,T,(*) where the observable variables xit are driven by the white noise ut, which is common to all the variables, the common factor, and by the idiosyncratic component ξit. The common factor ut is orthogonal to the idiosyncratic components ξit, the idiosyncratic components are mutually orthogonal (or weakly correlated). Lastly, the variations of the common factor ut affect the variable xit dynamically, that is through the lag polynomial αi+βiL. Asymptotic results for High-Dimensional Factor Models, particularly consistency of estimators of the common factors, are obtained for both n and T tending to infinity. Model (∗), generalized to allow for more than one common factor and a rich dynamic loading of the factors, has been studied in a fairly vast literature, with many applications based on macroeconomic datasets: (a) forecasting of inflation, industrial production, and unemployment; (b) structural macroeconomic analysis; and (c) construction of indicators of the Business Cycle. This literature can be broadly classified as belonging to the time- or the frequency-domain approach. The works based on the second are the subject of the present chapter. We start with a brief description of early work on Dynamic Factor Models. Formal definitions and the main Representation Theorem follow. The latter determines the number of common factors in the model by means of the spectral density matrix of the vector (x1tx2t⋯xnt). Dynamic principal components, based on the spectral density of the x’s, are then used to construct estimators of the common factors. These results, obtained in early 2000, are compared to the literature based on the time-domain approach, in which the covariance matrix of the x’s and its (static) principal components are used instead of the spectral density and dynamic principal components. Dynamic principal components produce two-sided estimators, which are good within the sample but unfit for forecasting. The estimators based on the time-domain approach are simple and one-sided. However, they require the restriction of finite dimension for the space spanned by the factors. Recent papers have constructed one-sided estimators based on the frequency-domain method for the unrestricted model. These results exploit results on stochastic processes of dimension n that are driven by a q-dimensional white noise, with q<n, that is, singular vector stochastic processes. The main features of this literature are described with some detail. Lastly, we report and comment the results of an empirical paper, the last in a long list, comparing predictions obtained with time- and frequency-domain methods. The paper uses a large monthly U.S. dataset including the Great Moderation and the Great Recession.


1988 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 36-38
Author(s):  
Robert J. Jensen

The concept of factor is often confusing for students when it is first introduced in the elementary curriculum. Motivating the development of new ideas through problem-solving episodes can be a fruitful approach before formal instruction begins. A tiling problem is posed here for your students to investigate using the microcomputer as a tool. Since factors, common factors, and the greatest common factor play a crucial role in the solution to problems of this type, this advance activity will give students a specific context upon which to build meaning for these concepts when they are fo rmally introduced.


1987 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. W. J. Granger

Many observed macrovariables are simple aggregates over a large number of microunits. It is pointed out that the generating process of the macrovariables is largely determined by the common factors in the generating mechanisms of the microvariables, even though these factors may be very unimportant at the microlevel. It follows that macrorelationships are simpler than the complete microrelationships, but that empirical investigations of microrelationships may not catch those components, containing common factors, which will determine the macrorelationship. It is also shown that an aggregate expectation or forecast is simply the common factor component of the individual agents expectations.


Author(s):  
V., Ulanchuk ◽  
◽  
S. Sokolyuk ◽  
E. Zharun ◽  
N. Koroteev ◽  
...  

The purpose of the article is to statistically assess the internal indicators of small business and analytical confirmation of the identified trends in their development to ensure the objectivity of information flows on the state and role of small business in the economy of Ukraine. A modern feature of the development of entrepreneurship in the economy of Ukraine is the growth of self-employment and mass labor migration. According to the results of the static assessment, it was found that the receipt of foreign currency in the form of remittances of labor migrants became a source of formation of the foreign exchange market, as their size is 30% of revenues from exports of goods from Ukraine. However, the amount of economic losses in the economy of Ukraine due to labor migration is much higher than foreign exchange earnings and is 6 % of total sales (goods and services) in Ukraine. Small business accumulated 48 % of the total number of employees in the economy of Ukraine, which turned it into a powerful politically and socially influential formation. The economic capacity of the small business remains traditionally low. In the structure of the country's economy, small enterprises (80 % of the total number of enterprises) bring only 19 % of income to the economy. The burden of the single tax for small enterprises is identical to the burden of paying income tax on medium-sized enterprises, which indicates relatively equal tax conditions for small and medium-sized businesses in Ukraine. Responsibility and autonomy of enterprises for the development and management decisions is growing extremely nowadays, what should provide further effectiveness of their activities. Ensure effective management is possible only through a comprehensive analysis and diagnostics business enterprise that meets modern requirements of economic development. The competitive situation in which today must engage in economic activities domestic enterprises of any form of ownership and industry sector is quite unstable, shaky, unpredictable and completely devoid of adverse external factors. Therefore, the company appears quite vulnerable to unlimited competitive space, and lack of improved methods of state regulation and favorable policy protectionism deepens an already tough situation. In such circumstances, company cant relied on anyone except themselves, involving the activity of experienced professionals that can simulate variable development of the company in a competitive environment and to predict the consequences of any move made by management in the form of decisions


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 31-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anzhela Kuznyetsova ◽  
Nataliia Misiats ◽  
Olha Klishchuk

This article is devoted to building of the equilibrium model between demand and supply on foreign currency at the Ukrainian Interbank Foreign Exchange Market (non-cash share). The authors discussed that appeared trade-offs are a product of established current foreign arrangement, administrative measures provided by the National Bank of Ukraine and range of fundamental variables, which are traditionally significant for Ukrainian economy. By means of FAVAR modeling model of demand and supply equlibrium on non-cash foreign currency was built on empirical data of Ukrainian Interbank Foreign Exchange Market, splitted into the periods, proposed by the authors. Next, it was discussed disconnection properties in the model and shown log-linearized specification of the one. The efficiency of fulfillment hypothesis on decointegrating of the fundamental variables' time series has been provided in form of critical statistics values. Also, instrument of GAP analysis of deviation from equilibrium state was proposed and the further analysis of a regulation style of monetary authority was provided. In conclusion, it was summarized that increased share of the cash out of the banks has significantly jeopardized the price stability in Ukraine and the NBU interventions would become more effective if the flexible foreign exchange rate will be accompanied with flexible regime of inflation targeting.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Luu Nguyen Quoc Hung

Teacher is one of the most important elements in education. The quality of education is largely determined by the teacher’s quality. Few would argue against the view that motivated staff are a central resource for the success and quality of an organization, and thus attention needs to be given to examining teachers’ motivation as a key to guaranteed quality education. At the Center of Foreign Languages, Can Tho University, teachers are always recognized as key factors for the success of the institution. This small-scale study was conducted with 42 teachers of English of the Center for Foreign Languages with the aim to examine common factors affecting teachers’ motivation and their perceptions towards quality education. The results of the survey revealed the most common factors for teachers’ motivation and the findings from focus group discussions indicated the positive relationship of teachers’ level of motivation with quality education.


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