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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 • 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
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
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 $1.50/£ • We would expect potatoes to sell for £0.67 per pound in UK (or £1.47 per kilo) • The ability to arbitrage divergences from this price depends on transportation costs, quotas and tariffs, different consumer tastes, etc.
Law of One PriceApplied to the Price Level • Given PLUK, the price level in the UK, the law of one price suggests that the same price level ought to prevail in the US after exchange of currency: • PLUS = XR($/£) 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 = $1.50/£
Law of One PriceApplied to the Price Level • The difference form of the PPP equation is • ΔXR($/£) = 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
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
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
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
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
The Big Mac Index • Big Macs are available all around the world and are the same everywhere. Use their prices, converted to US$, to judge other currencies’ purchasing power. • Problems with the Big Mac as a price index • Big Macs not tradeable nor are they completely uniform across countries • Purchasers of Big Mac get to sit at a table where real estate may be very expensive • The price may vary widely within a country • And yet, it seems to work about as well as other price indices
Big Mac PPP Calculations • Note US Big Mac price (averaged across the country) • Note the price in some country in its local currency • Change the local price to US$ 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
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
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%
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