
Are foreign exchange markets efficient? Are fundamentals  important for predicting exchange rate movements? What is the  signal-to-ratio of high frequency exchange rate changes? Is it  possible to define a measure of the equilibrium exchange rate that is  useful from an assessment perspective? 
  The book is a selective survey of current thinking on key topics in  exchange rate economics, supplemented throughout by new empirical  evidence. The focus is on the use of advanced econometric tools to  find answers to these and other questions which are important to  practitioners, policy-makers and academic economists. In addition, the  book addresses more technical econometric considerations such as the  importance of the choice between single-equation and system-wide  approaches to modelling the exchange rate, and the reduced form versus  structural equation problems. 
  Readers will gain both a comprehensive overview of the way  macroeconomists approach exchange rate modelling, and an understanding  of how advanced techniques can help them explain and predict the  behavior of this crucial economic variable.



