Sticky prices and sectoral real exchange rates
Sticky prices and sectoral real exchange rates
Rate this book:
About This Book
The classic explanation for the persistence and volatility of real exchange rates is that they are the result of nominal shocks in an economy with sticky goods prices. A key implication of this explanation is that if goods have differing degrees of price stickiness then relatively more sticky goods tend to have relatively more persistent and volatile good-level real exchange rates. Using panel data, we find only modest support for these key implications. The predictions of the theory for persistence have some modest support: in the data, the stickier is the price of a good the more persistent is its real exchange rate, but the theory predicts much more variation in persistence than is in the data. The predictions of the theory for volatiity fare less well: in the data, the stickier is the price of a good the smaller is its conditional variance while in the theory the opposite holds. We show that allowing for pricing complementarities leads to a modest improvement in the theory's predictions for persistence but little improvement in the theory's predictions for conditional variances.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Patrick J. Kehoe
Competitive equilibria with li
Competitive equilibria with limited enforcement
How to advance theory with str
How to advance theory with structural VARs
International business cycles
International business cycles with endogenous incomplete markets
Macroeconomics in a world econ
Macroeconomics in a world economy
Patrick Kehoe's comment on "de
Patrick Kehoe's comment on "determinants of business cycle comovement; a robust analysis" by Marianne Baxter and Michael Kouparitsas
Sales and the real effects of
Sales and the real effects of monetary policy