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Can International Macroeconomic Models Explain Low-Frequency Movements of Real Exchange Rates?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 42

Can International Macroeconomic Models Explain Low-Frequency Movements of Real Exchange Rates?

Real exchange rates exhibit important low-frequency fluctuations. This makes the analysis of real exchange rates at all frequencies a more sound exercise than the typical business cycle one, which compares actual and simulated data after the Hodrick-Prescott filter is applied to both. A simple two-country, two-good model, as described in Heathcote and Perri (2002), can explain the volatility of the real exchange rate when all frequencies are studied. The puzzle is that the model generates too much persistence of the real exchange rate instead of too little, as the business cycle analysis asserts. Finally, we show that the introduction of adjustment costs in production and in portfolio holdings allows us to reconcile theory and this feature of the data.

Can International Macroeconomic Models Explain Low-Frequency Movements of Real Exchange Rates?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 42

Can International Macroeconomic Models Explain Low-Frequency Movements of Real Exchange Rates?

Real exchange rates exhibit important low-frequency fluctuations. This makes the analysis of real exchange rates at all frequencies a more sound exercise than the typical business cycle one, which compares actual and simulated data after the Hodrick-Prescott filter is applied to both. A simple two-country, two-good model, as described in Heathcote and Perri (2002), can explain the volatility of the real exchange rate when all frequencies are studied. The puzzle is that the model generates too much persistence of the real exchange rate instead of too little, as the business cycle analysis asserts. Finally, we show that the introduction of adjustment costs in production and in portfolio holdings allows us to reconcile theory and this feature of the data.

Cointegrated TFP Processes and International Business Cycles
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 55

Cointegrated TFP Processes and International Business Cycles

A puzzle in international macroeconomics is that observed real exchange rates are highly volatile. Standard international real business cycle (IRBC) models cannot reproduce this fact. We show that TFP processes for the U.S. and the "rest of the world," is characterized by a vector error correction (VECM) and that adding cointegrated technology shocks to the standard IRBC model helps explaining the observed high real exchange rate volatility. Also we show that the observed increase of the real exchange rate volatility with respect to output in the last 20 year can be explained by changes in the parameter of the VECM.

Twin Default Crisis
  • Language: en

Twin Default Crisis

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2020
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Medea
  • Language: en

Medea

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Advances in Economics and Econometrics
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 633

Advances in Economics and Econometrics

The third volume of edited papers from the Tenth World Congress of the Econometric Society 2010.

The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Central Banking
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 809

The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Central Banking

"The Handbook reflects the state of the art in the theory and practice of central banking. It covers all the essential areas that have come under scrutiny since the global financial crisis of 2007-9"--

Nominal Versus Real Wage Rigidities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 52

Nominal Versus Real Wage Rigidities

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2001
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Monetary Policy and the Lost Decade
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 35

Monetary Policy and the Lost Decade

This paper investigates how monetary policy can help ward off a protracted deflationary slump when policy rates are near the zero bound by studying the experience of Japan during the "Lost Decade" which followed the asset-price bubble collapse in the early 1990s. Estimation results based on a structural model suggest that the Bank of Japan's interest-rate policy fits a conventional forward-looking reaction function with an inflation target of about 1 percent. The disappointing economic performance thus seems primarily due to a series of adverse economic shocks rather than an extraordinary policy error. In addition, counterfactual policy simulations based on the estimated structural model suggest that simply raising the inflation target would not have yielded a lasting improvement in performance. However, a price-targeting rule or a policy rule that combined a higher inflation target with a more aggressive response to output would have achieved superior stabilization results.