There is a vast amount of studies on the impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade [1][2][3]. The rationale of examining the impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade is that exchange rate volatility induces uncertainty into international transactions. This uncertainty decreases international trade and economic welfare [4]. Nonetheless, the impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade is theoretically and empirically ambiguous. Theoretically, exchange rate volatility can have a negative impact or a positive impact on international trade [3]. Empirically, there is no general consensus about the impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade although various measures of exchange rate volatility, different data sets either aggregated data or disaggregated data and various statistical methods such as the cointegration analysis and the panel data analysis have been tried [5,6]. The impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade can be considered as a case-by-case basis. Thus, many studies have been carried-out to examine the impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade for developing, emerging and developed countries. Nevertheless, Ćorić and Pugh [2] investigate the impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade using a meta-regression analysis on a total of 49 studies for the period from 1978 to 2002. The results demonstrate that there is an adverse impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade. Besides, the negative impact of exchange rate volatility is mostly found for study using disaggregated data. This finding is particularly significant for developing countries where forward and future and options markets are less developed compared with those in developed countries.The standard export demand model is usually used to examine the impact of exchange rate volatility on exports whilst the standard import demand is used to examine the impact of exchange rate volatility on imports. The standard exports model is estimated as exports are a function of exchange rate, foreign income and exchange rate volatility. The standard imports model is estimated as imports are a function of exchange rate, domestic income and exchange rate volatility [7]. Alternatively, other proxy for explanatory variable is used in the standard export demand or the standard import demand model or other additional explanatory variable is included in the standard export demand or the standard import demand. For example, Hall, et al. [4] include the real export earnings of oil-exporters relative to the exports country as an additional explanatory variable in the standard export model. There are two popular measures of exchange rate volatility that are used to examine the impact of exchange rate volatility on international trade. One measure is exchange rate volatility that is expressed by the standard deviation or the moving average of standard deviation [3,4]. The other measure is exchange rate volatility that is expressed by an Autoregressive C...