LECTURE 24: Dornbusch Overshooting Model

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lectures 22 & 23: DETERMINATION OF EXCHANGE RATES
Advertisements

1 Diploma Macro Paper 2 Monetary Macroeconomics Lecture 7 Policy effectiveness and inflation targeting Mark Hayes.
Exchange Rate Overshooting Dornbusch (1976) JPE Supplementary slides in International Macroeconomics & Finance Jarir Ajluni - July 2005.
International Fixed Income Topic IVA: International Fixed Income Pricing - Hedging.
Katarina Juselius Department of Economics University of Copenhagen.
Lecture 20: Dornbusch Overshooting Model. Intuition of the Dornbusch model: although adjustment in financial markets is instantaneous, adjustment in goods.
Chapter Nine 1 CHAPTER NINE Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
Determinants of Aggregate Demand in an Open Economy
1 Models of Exchange Rate Determination Lecture 1 IME LIUC Nov-Dec
Money, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
Preview: 9/29, 10/1 Quiz: Yfe … P … E
Money, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
International Economics: Theory, Application, and Policy, Ch. 26;  Charles van Marrewijk, Figure 26.1 Rudiger Dornbusch, 1942 – 2002.
J. K. Dietrich - FBE Fall, 2005 Term Structure: Tests and Models Week 7 -- October 5, 2005.
Mar Lesson 14 By John Kennes International Monetary Economics.
Topic IIC: Empirical Analysis: How Well Do the Parity Relations Hold? International Fixed Income.
Chapter 21. Stabilization policy with rational expectations
1 Models of Exchange Rate Determination Lecture 1 IME LIUC 2008.
Exchange Rate “Fundamentals” FIN 40500: International Finance.
Lectures 19 & 20: MONETARY DETERMINATION OF EXCHANGE RATES Building blocs - Interest rate parity - Money demand equation - Goods markets Flexible-price.
1 Section 4 The Exchange Rate in the Long Run. 2 Content Objectives Purchasing Power Parity A Long-Run PPP Model The Real Exchange Rate Summary.
1 Section 3 The Money Market. 2 Content Objectives A Definition of Money The Demand for Money The Money Market Equilibrium The Exchange Rate in the Short.
Money, Output, and Prices Classical vs. Keynesians.
Relationships among Inflation, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates 8 8 Chapter South-Western/Thomson Learning © 2006.
Chapter 6 Aggregate Supply: Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
Review: Exchange Rates Roberto Chang March Material for Midterm Basic: chapters 1-4 of FT Plus: what we have discussed in class (applying the theory.
International Financial Management Vicentiu Covrig 1 International Parity Relationships International Parity Relationships (chapter 5)
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 The Foreign Exchange Market.
10/1/2015Multinational Corporate Finance Prof. R.A. Michelfelder 1 Outline 5: Purchasing Power Parity, Interest Rate Parity, and Exchange Rate Forecasting.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Introduction Long run models are useful when all prices of inputs and outputs have time.
Lectures 18 & 19: MONETARY DETERMINATION OF EXCHANGE RATES
Topic 3: Exchange Rates Rogoff, K. (1996) “The Purchasing Power Parity Puzzle” Journal of Economic Literature, Vol. 34, No.2 Rogoff, K. (1996) “The Purchasing.
Chapter 5 International Parity Relationships and Forecasting FX Rates Management 3460 Institutions and Practices in International Finance Fall 2003 Greg.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2004 South-Western. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Efficient Markets and International Interest Parity.
The Theory of Capital Markets Rational Expectations and Efficient Markets.
1 The Foreign Exchange Market Chapter Foreign Exchange Definitions Exchange rate: price of one currency in terms of another Exchange rate: price.
Doctoral School of Finance and Banking Bucharest Uncovered interest parity and deviations from uncovered interest parity MSc student: Alexandru-Chidesciuc.
The stock market, rational expectations, efficient markets, and random walks The Economics of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets Mishkin, 7th ed. Chapter.
API Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University (III) MONEY & INFLATION LECTURE 6: AGGREGATE DEMAND & AGGREGATE SUPPLY In lectures 3-5 we saw the effects.
Lectures 22 & 23: DETERMINATION OF EXCHANGE RATES Building blocs - Interest rate parity - Money demand equation - Goods markets Flexible-price version:
1 ECON 671 – International Economics Portfolio Balance Models.
Outline 4: Exchange Rates and Monetary Economics: How Changes in the Money Supply Affect Exchange Rates and Forecasting Exchange Rates in the Short Run.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Preview Law of one price Purchasing power parity Long run model of exchange rates: monetary.
1 International Finance Chapter 16 Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run.
The Monetary Approach to Exchange Rates Putting Everything Together.
Lecture 15: Rational expectations and efficient market hypothesis
Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government,
PART VIII: MONETARY DETERMINATION OF EXCHANGE RATES LECTURE Building blocs - Interest rate parity - Money demand equation - Goods markets Flexible-price.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall1 Chapter 10: Exchange Rate Determination and Forecasting Power Points created by:
Slide 14-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 14-9: Effect of an Increase in the European Money Supply on the Dollar/Euro Exchange Rate U.S.
ECON 511 International Finance & Open Macroeconomy CHAPTER THREE The Monetary Approach to Flexible Exchange Rates.
Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 9-1 Chapter Outline The FE Line: Equilibrium in the Labor Market The IS Curve: Equilibrium in the Goods.
International Economics Tenth Edition
1 Lecture 12 The Stock Market, the Theory of Rational Expectations, and the Efficient Market Hypothesis.
Aggregate Demand (AD) & Aggregate Supply (AS) 1. Neoclassical A.S. curve 2. Modified Keynesian A.S. 3. Expectations-augmented A.S. 4. Rational expectations.
Predicting Exchange Rates Out of Sample: Can Economic Fundamentals Beat the Random Walk? Jiahan Li Assistant professor of Statistics University of Notre.
Introduction to a Small Macro Model Jaromir Hurnik Monetary Policy and Business Cycle April 2009.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 The Foreign Exchange Market.
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Chapter 15 Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run.
Lectures 22 & 23: DETERMINATION OF EXCHANGE RATES Building blocs - Interest rate parity - Money demand equation - Goods markets Flexible-price version:
Expectations, Money and Determination of the Exchange Rate
Lectures 24 & 25: Determination of exchange rates
Exchange Rates in the Long Run
Tanya Molodtsova, Alex Nikolsko-Rzhevskyy
LECTURE 25: Dornbusch Overshooting Model
Chapter 12 Theories of Exchange Rate Determination
EC3067 International Finance
PART VIII: MONETARY MODELS OF EXCHANGE RATES
ECO 401: International Economics
Presentation transcript:

LECTURE 24: Dornbusch Overshooting Model

Intuition of the Dornbusch model: Although adjustment in financial markets is instantaneous, adjustment in goods markets is slow. We saw that 100 or 200 years of data can reject a random walk for Q, i.e., detect regression to the mean. Interpretation: prices are sticky: can’t jump at a moment in time but adjust gradually in response to excess demand: 𝑝 =−ν(𝑝− 𝑝 ). One theoretical rationale: Calvo overlapping contracts. Q

DORNBUSCH OVERSHOOTING MODEL PPP holds only in the Long Run, for 𝑆 . In the SR, S can be pulled away from 𝑆 . Consider an increase in real interest rate r  i – π e (e.g., due to sudden M contraction; as in UK or US 1980, or Japan 1990) Domestic assets more attractive Appreciation: S  until currency “overvalued” relative to 𝑠 => investors expect future depreciation. When  se is large enough to offset i - i*, that is the overshooting equilibrium .

Dornbusch Overshooting Model Financial markets i – i* = 𝑠𝑒 UIP + Regressive expectations 𝑠𝑒 = -θ (s- 𝑠 ) See table for evidence of regressive expectations. interest differential pulls currency above LR equilibrium. (s- 𝑠 ) = - 1 θ (i – i∗) We could stop here.

Some evidence that expectations are indeed formed regressively: ∆se = a – ϑ (s - 𝑠 ). Forecasts from survey data show a tendency for appreciation today to induce expectations of depreciation in the future, back toward long-run equilibrium.

Dornbusch Overshooting Model Financial markets (s- 𝑠 ) = - 1 θ (i – i∗) What determines i & i* ? Money market equilibrium: The change in m is one-time: m - p = φy - λi 𝑚 = m; Subtract equations: SR 𝑚 - 𝑝 = φ 𝑦 - λ 𝑖 m - 𝑝 = φy - λi* LR 𝑦 = y; & 𝑖 = i* => (p - 𝑝 ) = λ(i – i∗) ] = - λ θ (s- 𝑠 ) = => Inverse relationship between s & p to satisfy financial market equilibrium. •

The Dornbusch Diagram (p - 𝑝 ) = - λθ (𝑠 − 𝑠 ). | overshooting | Because P is tied down in the SR, S overshoots its new LR equilibrium. its PPP holds in LR. - New B (p - 𝑝 ) = - λθ (𝑠 − 𝑠 ). Experiment: a one-time monetary expansion - Old A ? C | overshooting | (m/p) ↑ => i ↓ | | Sticky p => In the SR, we need not be on the goods market equilibrium line (PPP), but we are always on the financial market equilibrium line (inverse proportionality between p and s): If θ is high, the line is steep, and there is not much overshooting. 𝑠= 𝑠 − 1 λθ (p- 𝑝 ).

Excess Demand at C causes P to rise over time In the instantaneous overshooting equilibrium (at C), S rises more-than-proportionately to M to equalize expected returns. Excess Demand at C causes P to rise over time until reaching LR equilibrium at B.

Goods markets The experiment: a permanent ∆m => => Neutrality at point B How do we get from SR to LR? I.e., from inherited P, to PPP? at point C Sticky p = overshooting from a monetary expansion P responds gradually to excess demand: Solve differential equations for p & s: [SEE APPENDIX I] => => We now know how far s and p have moved along the path from C to B , after t years have elapsed.

Now consider a special case: rational expectations The actual speed with which s moves to LR equilibrium: matches the speed it was expected to move to LR equilibrium: in the special case: θ = ν. In the very special case θ = ν = ∞, we jump to B at the start -- the flexible-price case. =>Overshooting results from instant adjustment in financial markets combined with slow adjustment in goods markets: ν < ∞.

SUMMARY OF FACTORS DETERMINING THE EXCHANGE RATE (1) LR monetary equilibrium: 𝑆 =( 𝑃 𝑃 ∗ ) 𝑄 = 𝑀/ 𝑀 ∗ 𝐿( , )/ 𝐿 ∗ (,) 𝑄 . (2) Dornbusch overshooting: SR monetary fundamentals pull S away from 𝑆 , in proportion to the real interest differential. (3) LR real exchange rate 𝑄 can change, e.g., Balassa-Samuelson or oil shock. (4) Speculative bubbles.

Appendix I: (1) Solution to Dornbusch differential equations How do we get from SR to LR? I.e., from inherited P, to PPP? Neutrality at point B at point C P responds gradually to excess demand: = overshooting from a monetary expansion Solve differential equation for p: Use inverse proportion-ality between p & s: Use it again: Solve differential equation for s: We now know how far s and p have moved along the path from C to B , after t years have elapsed.

} (2) Extensions of Dornbusch overshooting model Endogenous y (pp. 1171-75 at end of RD 1976 paper) Bubble paths More complicated M supply processes Random walk Expected future change in M Changes in steady-state M growth, gm = π : Regressive expectations: 𝑞 𝑒 ≡ ( 𝑠 𝑒 - π 𝑒 + π ∗𝑒 ) = - θ (q - 𝑞 ) (1) UIP: i – i* = 𝑠 𝑒 (2) => (q - 𝑞 ) = - 1 𝜃 [(i- π 𝑒 ) – (i*- π ∗𝑒 ) ] } I.e., real exchange rate depends on real interest differential.

Appendix II: How well do the models hold up? (1) Empirical performance of monetary models At first, the Dornbusch (1976) overshooting model had some good explanatory power. But these were in-sample tests. In a famous series of papers, Meese & Rogoff (1983) showed all models did very poorly out-of-sample. In particular, the models were “out-performed by the random walk,” at least at short horizons. I.e., today’s spot rate is a better forecast of next month’s spot rate than are observable macro fundamentals. Later came evidence monetary models were of some help in forecasting exchange rate changes, especially at long horizons. E.g., N. Mark (1995): a basic monetary model beats RW at horizons of 4-16 quarters, not just in-sample, but also out-of-sample.

(2) Forecasting At short horizons of 1-3 months the random walk has lower prediction error than the monetary models. At long horizons, the monetary models have lower prediction error than the random walk.

not just with parameters estimated in-sample but also out-of-sample. Forecasting, continued Nelson Mark (AER, 1995): a basic monetary model can beat a Random Walk at horizons of 4 to 16 quarters, not just with parameters estimated in-sample but also out-of-sample. Cerra & Saxena (JIE, 2012), too, find it in a 98-currency panel.

Possible Techniques for Predicting the Exchange Rate Models based on fundamentals Monetary Models Monetarist/Lucas model Overshooting model Other models based on economic fundamentals Portfolio-balance model… Models based on pure time series properties “Technical analysis” (used by many traders) ARIMA, VAR, or other time series techniques (used by econometricians) Other strategies Use the forward rate; or interest differential; random walk (“the best guess as to future spot rate is today’s spot rate”)