Relationships Among Inflation, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
Relationships Among Inflation, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
Relationships Among Inflation, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
Relationships among
Inflation, Interest Rates, and
Exchange Rates
Brazilian real?
-30%
Purchasing power parity
The foreign exchange rate must change by
(approximately) the difference between
domestic and foreign rates of inflation (relative
version)
Exchange rate change = inflation differential
Currencies with high rate of inflation should
devaluate relative with currencies with lower
rates of inflation
Inflation up exchange rate down
Inflation down exchange rate up
One-period version
et= 0.75(1.05/1.03)=0.77$/SFr
can be approximated
e = ih if = 0.02
then
et = 0.75*(1+0.02)
Purchasing power parity
A in equilibrium
B in
disequilibrium
Foreign
currency is
under valuated
Purchasing power parity
Nominal exchange rate vs real exchange rate
1/93.96*(119.2/91)/(152.4/82.4)= 0.007538$/
1/160.23 = 0.006230$/
To interpret this real exchange rate and see how it changed
since 1980, we compare it to the real exchange rate in 1980,
which just equals the nominal rate at that time of
1/226.63 = $0.004412/
(because the real and nominal rates are equal in the base
period).
r1= a1 + i1
r2= a2 + i2
Interest rate parity, says that the currency of the country with lower
interest rate should be at a forward premium (in terms of currency
of the country with the higher rate, that is $ in our case, where US is
the home country)
The dollar has the higher interest rate --> Forward discount
interest interest
US 10%annual 2.50%90 days
Europe 7%annual 1.75%90 days
The dollar has the higher interest rate --> Forward discount