VI. Purchasing Power Parity Read Chapter 4, pp. 102‑111 1. The Law of One Price (LOP) LOP Conditions for LOP to hold 2. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) Absolute PPP Relative PPP Empirical evidence Real Interest Rate Parity and international Fisher effect 3. Real Exchange Rate Definition Effective exchange rates Exchange rate pass-through
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VI. Purchasing Power Parity Read Chapter 4, pp. 102 ‑ 111 1. The Law of One Price (LOP) LOP Conditions for LOP to hold 2. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
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VI. Purchasing Power Parity
Read Chapter 4, pp. 102‑1111. The Law of One Price (LOP)
LOPConditions for LOP to hold
2. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)Absolute PPPRelative PPPEmpirical evidenceReal Interest Rate Parity and international Fisher effect
3. Real Exchange Rate Definition Effective exchange rates
Exchange rate pass-through
1-2
Overview: International Parity Conditions
• Some fundamental questions that managers of MNEs, international portfolio investors, importers, exporters and government officials must deal with every day are:
– What are the determinants of exchange rates?
– Are changes in exchange rates predictable?
• The economic theories that link exchange rates, price levels, and interest rates together are called international parity conditions.
• These international parity conditions form the core of the financial theory that is unique to international finance.
• We look at the relation between exchange and price levels.
1-3
1. The Law of One Price (LOP)
1.1. The Law of One Price (LOP) • LOP: Commodity arbitrage should equalize the
prices of a same good in two countries, when measured in the same currency (except for transportation costs).
• So, for spot rate St measured as ($/£),
Pt = St P£t
Pt: $-price of an iPod in Canada
P£t: £-price of an iPod in U.K.
1-4
1.1. The Law of One Price (LOP)
• Example: Pt = $100, P£t = £50.
Q1: What is spot rate at which the LOP holds?
St(LOP) = $100/£50 = $2/£.
Q2: What happens if St moves to $1/£?
St P£t = ($1/£)(£50) = $50, while Pt=$100.
Arbitragers buy in U.K. and sell in Canada.
Then St Pt£ goes up (e.g. $75) and Pt goes down (e.g. $75):
At this point, there is no incentives for further arbitrage. ║
1-5
1.2 Conditions for LOP
• Homogeneity of the good• No barriers to trade (tariffs, import duties and
quotas.)• No transportation costs.
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2. Purchasing power parity (PPP)
2.1 Absolute purchasing power parity• Arbitrage in price levels leads to absolute PPP. The price
level refers to an weighted average price of all goods and services in the economy.
Pt: price level in Canada measured in $
P£t: price level in U.K. measured in £.
• Then arbitrage ensures, Pt = St P£t.
2.2 Relative purchasing power parity
Interpret Pt as price index.
S
S P
P = P
P
t
1+t
t
1+t
t
1+t
£
£
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2.2 Relative purchasing power parity
Q: SPPP? (200/100) = (150/100) [St+1/3.00].
St+1= $4.00/£.
Example: CPI Index (time 1)
CPI Index (time 2)
Canada 100 200
U.K. 100 150
Spot rate
$3.00/£ SPPP?
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2.2 Relative purchasing power parity
• Recall that inflation rates are defined as
. + 1 = P
P , + 1 = P
P *1+t*
t
*1+t
1+tt
1+t
Rewrite the relative version of the PPP, using π and π*:
S
S
S
S +
S
S + =
S - S S where ,)S
S + )(1+(1 = +1
)S
S + S - S)(+(1 = +1
*
**
t1+t*
tt1+t*
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Percent change in the spot exchangerate for foreign currency
Percent difference inexpected rates of inflation
(foreign relative tohome country)
2
4
-5
-4
-1
-3 -1-4 -2 2 41 3 5
3
1
-2
-3
-6 6
PPP line
P
Exhibit 4.2 Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
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2.2 Relative purchasing power parity
• Relative PPP describes the linkage among domestic and foreign inflation, and exchange rates.
• The percentage change in the exchange rate is approximately equal to the difference between domestic and foreign inflation.
• In other words, the depreciation or appreciation of the exchange rate offsets the difference in inflation rates.
• Justification for the PPP: Imagine a high inflation in Canada but no change in spot exchange rate. Then imports will become more competitive, and exports less competitive, leading to a deficit on current account, and exerting downward pressure on dollar.
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2.2 Relative purchasing power parity
• Example: Suppose π$(Canada)=5% p.a., and π£
(U.K.)=2% p.a. Then the £ is expected to appreciate roughly by 3% p.a.
This relation holds fairly well for high inflation countries.
• Example: In early 1980s, Israel began running high inflation. First 2 quarter of 1984:
πIsrael = 197.2% p.a.
π$ = 4.2% p.a.
(St+1 - St)/St = - 192.8% p.a. ║
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2.3 Empirical evidence
2.3 Empirical evidence
Q: Is St = Pt/P*t ?
A: No. • Reasons:
– Different basket of goods for price indexes.– Non-traded goods.– Barriers to trade– Transportation costs– Long adjustment time
• PPP is still useful as– a long-run benchmark exchange rate– a basis to make a more meaningful international
comparisons of economic data.
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2.3 Empirical evidence• GDP in 2002 measured in market and PPP exchange rate
(column 3 is based on market, and column 5 based on PPP exchange rate.)
Rank Country GDP (US$ billion) Country GDP (US$ billion) 1 US 10,416 US 10,138 2 J apan 3,978 China 5,732 3 Germany 1,978 J apan 3,261 4 UK 1,552 India 2,694 5 France 1,409 Germany 2,171 6 China 1,237 France 1,554 7 I taly 1,180 UK 1,510 8 Canada 715 I taly 1,481 9 Spain 649 Brazil 1,311 10 Mexico 637 Russia 1,141
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2.4 Real interest parity and international Fisher effect
[Beginning of optional material]
Q: How are interest rates in foreign money markets related to dollar interest rates?
We will first look at the "Uncovered Interest Parity" (UIP).
But by Fisher relation, the last equation is equal to
Et(r$) Et(r£), where r denotes real interest rate.
It says that the expected real interest rate is the same across countries. [End of optional material]
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3. Real exchange rate
• How can we measure the relative competitiveness of a country's goods?
• Example: Competitiveness in Canada's timber
Relative competitiveness of Canada's timber depends on
a) the change in price level in two countries and
b) the change in exchange rates
The price of Canadian timber: $2 per unit in Canada.
at $2/£: selling price in U.K. is £1.
at $1/£: selling price in U.K. is £1/2.
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3.1 Definition: real exchange rate• The real exchange rate for $ [the currency in numerator],
q, is defined as
S tP
Pt
S 1+tP
P 1+t
q
t£,
1t£,
£
$
)e)(1(1
1
Assume Pt = P£,tSt, P$,t+1= price of a hamburger in Canada.Pt+1=$4, St+1 = $2/£, P£,t+1 = £2.50:
0.8 = 2.50
2 =
2.50
1
)($2/
$4 =
P 1+t S 1+t
P1+t
£
£
£££,
$,
With $Pt+1: you can buy 1 hamburger in Canada, butyou can buy q = 0.8 hamburgers in U.K.
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3.1 Definition: real exchange rate
• If q < 1 then it means that – the inflation at home has been less than inflation
abroad, after adjusting for the change in the exchange rates.
– there has been an improvement in export competitiveness
• Alternative interpretation
)e)(1(1
1
£
$
q
• Suppose the annual inflation rate is 5% in Canada, and 3% in UK. PPP relation predicts that $ will depreciate about 2% against £. • If $ indeed depreciates 2%, the PPP holds, and the real exchange rate, q, is equal to one.
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3.1 Definition: real exchange rate
• If U$ indeed depreciates 6%, the $ depreciates by more than the inflation differential, and the real exchange rate, q, is equal to 0.96, strengthening the Canadian competitiveness in export market.
• Real exchange rate, q, measures the extent to which the actual exchange rates deviate from PPP. Whether PPP holds or not has an important implications for international trade.
• Real exchange rate is an useful tool in predicting upward or downward pressure on a country balance of payments and exchange rate.
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Example: Swiss firm selling product in Canada:Q. Has Canada gained or lost competitiveness in this example?
• What happens to the competitiveness of Canada in international trade if dollar appreciates with respect to some trading partner's currencies, but depreciates with respect to others?
• We look at the trade-volume-weighted average of real (nominal) exchange rates, called the real (nominal) effective exchange rates.
• An increase in the real effective exchange rates signifies a loss in average competitiveness in international trade.
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Exchange rate pass-through
• Pass-through is the measure of response of imported and exported product prices to exchange rate changes. Suppose a BMW cost $70,000 in Canada and €70,000 in Germany, and spot rate of $1.00/€.
• Assume the euro appreciates 20% to $1.20/€. If the price of the BMW in Canada rises only by 7.14% (rather than by 20%) to $75,000, then the degree of pass-through is partial:
– degree of pass-through = 7.14%/20% = 35.7%.
• The remaining 64.3% of the exchange rate change has been absorbed by the BMW.