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Inflation and Exchange Rates

Inflation and Exchange Rates. Recall two kinds of inflation that we distinguish in this class Money inflation: an increase in the money supply Price inflation: an increase in the price level Money inflation is the primary cause of price inflation Law of one price

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Inflation and Exchange Rates

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  1. Inflation and Exchange Rates • Recall two kinds of inflation that we distinguish in this class • Money inflation: an increase in the money supply • Price inflation: an increase in the price level • Money inflation is the primary cause of price inflation • Law of one price • The idea that the same goods should sell for the same price

  2. Inflation and Exchange Rates • Arbitrage: buying and selling to take advantage of price discrepancies. • Buy where prices are low, sell where high • Transportation & other transaction costs may prevent arbitrage • Arbitrage tends to reduce price discrepancies as supply is shifted from low-price areas to high-price areas

  3. International arbitrage • The law of one price when applied to international markets suggests that identical goods should cost the same in different countries after exchange rates have been factored in. • Suppose potatoes are $1.00 per pound and the exchange rate is $1.50/£ • We would expect potatoes to sell for £0.67 per pound in UK (or £1.47 per kilo) • The ability to arbitrage divergences from this price depends on transportation costs, quotas and tariffs, different consumer tastes, etc.

  4. Law of One PriceApplied to the Price Level • Given PLUK, the price level in the UK, the law of one price suggests that the same price level ought to prevail in the US after exchange of currency: • PLUS = XR($/£) x PLUK • If this condition is satisfied, there is purchasing power parity (PPP) between these two currencies • Absolute PPP rearranges this equation • XR($/£) = PLUS / PLUK • Example: if the UK price level (£/basket) is 2/3 of the US price level ($/basket), the XR should be 3/2 = $1.50/£

  5. Law of One PriceApplied to the Price Level • The difference form of the PPP equation is • ΔXR($/£) = ΔPLUS – ΔPLUK • Example: if the UK price level rises 5% in one year and the US price level rises 3% in the same year, the theory predicts the XR would fall by 2% • Problems • Difficult to compare “baskets” between countries • Price levels are retrospective, XR are prospective • Many goods are non-tradable

  6. Problems with PPP • Difficult to choose a “basket” (price index) that can be applied to two countries • A product that is important to one country may be unimportant or non-existent in the other. • Some goods and services are non-tradable or entail high transportation costs • Trade barriers may inhibit arbitrage • Markets for some goods may be highly competitive in one country, monopolized in another • Tax policies are different. European VAT taxes are included in prices, US sales taxes are not

  7. Problems with PPP • Any price data is very approximate • Price levels are retrospective, exchange rates are prospective – they reflect market participants’ estimates of future developments

  8. Exchange Rates and Price Levels • Long the run version of absolute PPP (correlation of XR with price levels) works well (3 years or more, Fig. 16.2) • Short run correlation is not so good • Also, the long run relative version of PPP (correlation of XR changes with price level changes) works well in the long run, not well in the short run • Why? In the long run, capital and labor can be moved so that some nontradeable goods are produced where they were previously underpriced

  9. The Big Mac Index

  10. The Big Mac Index • A semi-serious effort by The Economist magazine to assess the purchasing power of various currencies • Why the Big Mac? McDonald’s has locations in almost every country

  11. The Big Mac Index • Big Macs are available all around the world and are the same everywhere. Use their prices, converted to US$, to judge other currencies’ purchasing power. • Problems with the Big Mac as a price index • Big Macs not tradeable nor are they completely uniform across countries • Purchasers of Big Mac get to sit at a table where real estate may be very expensive • The price may vary widely within a country • And yet, it seems to work about as well as other price indices

  12. Big Mac PPP Calculations • Note US Big Mac price (averaged across the country) • Note the price in some country in its local currency • Change the local price to US$ using the current XR • Compute the percent difference between the local price in US$ and the US price. • If the local price is lower, the currency is under-valued • If the local price is higher, the currency is over-valued

  13. Real Interest Rate Parity Theory • We have seen how interest rate differentials affect capital flows. Now we see how real interest rates affect real exchange rates • Real interest rates are interest rates adjusted for anticipated price inflation: r = i – %ΔPL • “i” is the nominal interest rate (% per annum) • %ΔPL is the anticipated percent change in the price level (price inflation) • “r” is the real, inflation-adjusted interest rate

  14. Real Interest Rate Parity Theory • Real interest rate theory suggests that a real interest rate differential between two countries should be reflected in the expected change in the real exchange rate of their currencies. Example: rUK – rUS = %ΔRXR • Example: • US i=5% nominal, past %ΔPL=3%, real r=2% • UK i=7% nominal, past %ΔPL=6%, real r=1% • Expected change in real XR = rUK-rUS = -1%

  15. The US$ versus other currencies • The US dollar index shows the US dollar in terms of a basket of foreign currencies consisting of • 57.6% Euros • 13.6% Yen • 11.9% Pound sterling • 9.1% Canadian dollar • 4.2% Swedish kroner • 3.6% Swiss franc

  16. US Dollar Index History

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