1 / 23

LECTURES 8 & 9: PURCHASING POWER PARITY (PPP)  EMPIRICAL TESTS OF PPP

LECTURES 8 & 9: PURCHASING POWER PARITY (PPP)  EMPIRICAL TESTS OF PPP. Motivating questions: How integrated are goods markets internationally? How rapidly do prices adjust?. PPP: ALTERNATE DEFINTIONS

nash
Télécharger la présentation

LECTURES 8 & 9: PURCHASING POWER PARITY (PPP)  EMPIRICAL TESTS OF PPP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LECTURES 8 & 9: PURCHASING POWER PARITY (PPP) EMPIRICAL TESTS OF PPP • Motivating questions: • How integrated are goods markets internationally? • How rapidly do prices adjust?

  2. PPP: ALTERNATE DEFINTIONS • Absolute PPP P ≡ the absolute price of a basket of goods in local currency, not just an index(from Penn World Tables or World Bank’sIntl. Comparison Program.) • , i.e., the ratio of purchasing powers. • RER=1, where real exchange rate RER • In logs, e = p - p*. API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  3. PPP: ALTERNATE DEFINTIONS (continued) • Relative PPP CPI ≡ is a price index, expressed relative to an arbitrary base year e.g., “CPI2000≡ 100.0” (from national agencies). • CPI = (E) (CPI*) • Q is constant (at ), where Q ≡ E. • In logs, Δe = Δcpi – Δcpi*(relative to some base year). • Annual depreciation =π - π* . or E = . API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  4. PPP: EMPIRICAL QUESTIONS • Does PPP hold: in the short run? in the long run? • What is the estimated speed of adjustment to the LR? • What is the test’s “statistical power”? • Are PPP deviations: • related to variation in nominal exchange rates? - Can one infer causality? - Is Var (q) related to currency regimes? • related to geography?- To distance? To borders? • Does the LawofOnePrice hold better in somesectors than others? - Commodities vs. Manufactures&Services - Tradables vs. Nontradables - Imports. (Is there full pass-through?) API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  5. PPP in a sense holds well in hyperinflations: The cumulative change in E corresponds to the cumulative change in CPI. API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  6. SPECIFICATION OF PPP TEST :thereal exchange rate as an AutoRegressive process where ut ≡ random disturbance with E(ut) = 0. (random walk, or unit root) (full adjustment to PPP) (gradual adjustment to PPP). Common findingin tests of 1980s: can’t reject H0 . True problem:Insufficient power in the tests, due to insufficient data.Since 1990, studies have sought more data. API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  7. With 100 or 200 years of data it is not hard to reject a random walk, i.e., to detect regression to the mean. qt API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  8. API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  9. One lesson: reversion to LR Taylor spliced together 100+ years of data for 20 currencies: 1870-1996 API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  10. PPP clearly fails in the short run. What is HAlt? Sticky prices? How can we tell? • Three useful kinds of empirical evidence: • The pattern of movement in real exchange rates: • • band or threshold•Random Walk• trend• AR . • • Effects of exchange rate regime on variability in Q. • • Tests of Law of One Price for narrowly defined goods. API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  11. Four patterns ofdeviation from PPP • and their likely origins: • Band <= barriers to trade • Random walk <= shifts in terms of trade • Trend <= Balassa-Samuelson effect • Autoregression<= sticky prices. Q ≡ Q ≡ Q ≡ Random Walk Band Q ≡ Q ≡ Trend Autoregression API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  12. Var(et) and Var (qt) are correlated. • Is it coincidence? No, it can’t be: Every time a regime switch raises variability of nominal exchange rates, it also raises variability of realexchangerates. • Pre- and post-1973(Fig. 19.4) • Post-war regimes (Mussa,1986) • e.g, Canadian float in the 1950s • Inter-war period (Eichengreen, 1988): 1922-26 float vs. 1927-31 fix • A century of PPP (A.Taylor, 2002):1870-1914 Gold standard 1914-45 Interwar 1946-71 Bretton Woods 1971-96 Float

  13. Figure 19.4 Nominal & real exchange rates both became more volatile after 1973. When nominal exchange rate variability (¥/$) went up with floating, real exchange rate variability went upin tandem. 1973 Coincidence? API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

  14. The final nail in the coffin:Exchange rate variability across a century of regimes Each observation is a country-regime.(Adapted from A.Taylor, 2002) 1870-1996 Variability of real exchange rate Again, each time a more flexible regime raises nominal variability, it raises real variability too. Variability of nominal exchange rate Prof. Jeffrey Frankel

  15. FAILURES OF PURCHASING POWER PARITY (PPP) Tests of the Law of One Price NTGs Commodities Manufactures Big Mac hamburgers Imports Barriers to International Integration Transportation costs Tariffs & non-tariff trade barriers Border frictions Currencies Non-TradedGoods-- The Balassa-Samuelson Relationship

  16. Tests of the LawofOnePrice (LoOP) • InternationallyTraded vs. NonTraded Goods&Services, e.g., haircuts & housing;little scope for arbitrage. • “Customer goods” vs. “auction goods,” agricultural&mineralcommodities -- where arbitrage works well. • Disaggregated manufactures • In reality, even TGs have a NTG component (distribution & retail), & vice versa.- Some models make the TG/NTG line endogenous:Bergin (2003); Ghironi&Melitz(2004)-McDonalds hamburgers.The Economist, Parsley & Wei(2003). • Pass-through of import prices. API-120, Prof.J.Frankel

  17. NTGs Prices of nontraded services vary widely. Notice that they are lower in poorer (low-wage) countries than in high-wage countries. Professor Jeffrey Frankel,

  18. Commodities Arbitrage equalizes prices for a homogenous metal such as gold=> The Law of One Price holds. { Note: India has tariffs & quotas on gold imports. G.Alessandria & J.Kaboski, 2008, “Why are Goods So Cheap in Some Countries?” Business Review Q2 (Fed,Res,Bankof Philadelphia), Table 2. ITF-220 Prof.J.Frankel

  19. Manufactures Alberto Giovannini, “Exchange Rates and Traded Goods Prices,” J.Int.Ec.,1988. Even in a manu- facturing sector as disaggregated and seemingly standardized as ball bearings, the relative price in Japan varies • widely, and • in correlation with the ¥/$ exchange rate. Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Harvard University

  20. Big Macs The price tends to be higher in rich countries (e.g., Europe & Japan), than in developing countries (e.g., China) and in countries with overvalued currencies (e.g., Argentina in 2000). Big Macs are partly traded (ingredients) & partly nontraded (cooking & retail). Their price varies widely across countries. Professor Jeffrey Frankel

  21. Pass-through to import prices Pass-through coefficient ≡ % change in local price resulting from a given % change in exchange rate. Pass-through is greatest for imported goods at dock, but less for prices of the same goods at retail level. Reason: local distribution & retail costs. The passthrough to prices of local substitutes is again less; and is still less to the CPI. Exchange rate pass-through to domestic prices 76 developing and other countries, 1990-2001 Source: Frankel, Parsley & Wei(2012)

  22. Passthrough coefficientsfor less developed countries > for rich, historically. Source: Frankel, Parsley & Wei (2012)

  23. API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

More Related