@phdthesis{Brause2010, author = {Brause, Alexander F.}, title = {Foreign Exchange Market Interventions: New Empirical Views of Emerging Markets}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-55207}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Since the beginning, central banks have used a wide range of instruments to achieve their ultimate purpose of price stability. One measure in the authoritiesÂ’ toolbox is a foreign exchange market intervention. The discussion about this instrument has come a long way. So far, the discussion relied mainly on industrialized countries'Â’ experiences. The negative outcomes of most studies with respect to the effectiveness of the intervention tool, opened up a discussion, whether interventions should be used by the authorities to manage exchange rate aspects. Consequently, the question about the dynamics of foreign exchange market interventions is now open to the subject-matter of developing and emerging market countries. Monetary policy in those countries often constitutes an active management of exchange rates. However, the basic discussions about intervention dynamics have had one essential drawback. Neither the primary literature of industrialized countries nor studies dealing with developing countries have considered the fact that intervention purposes and the corresponding effects are likely to vary over time. This thesis is designed to provide the reader with essential issues of central bank interventions, and aims to give further, as well as new contributions, in terms of empirical research on interventions in emerging markets. The main objectives of this study are the analysis of central bank intervention motives, and the corresponding effects on exchange rates in emerging markets. The time dependency of both issues is explicitly considered, which states a novelty in academic research of central bank interventions. Additionally, the outcomes are discussed against the background of underlying economic and monetary policy fundamentals. This could well serve as a starting point for further research.}, subject = {Schwellenl{\"a}nder}, language = {en} }