This paper models the short-run as well as the long-run relationship between the parallel
and official markets for US dollars in Greece in a threshold VECM framework. Modeling
exchange rates within this context can be motivated by the fact that the transition
mechanism is controlled by the parallel market premium. The results show that linearity
is rejected in favour of a TVECM specification, which forms statistically an adequate
representation of the data. Two regimes are implied by the model; the ?typical? regime,
which applies most of the time and the ?unusual? one associated with economic and
political events t hat took place in Greece during the 1980s. Another implication is that in
the parallel exchange rate there are strong asymmetries between the two regimes in the
speed of adjustment to the long-run equilibrium. Finally, Granger causality runs from the
official to the parallel market in both regimes but not vice versa.