International Risk Sharing and the Transmission of Productivity Shocks

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP4746

Authors: Giancarlo Corsetti; Luca Dedola; Sylvain Leduc

Abstract: A central puzzle in international finance is that real exchange rates are volatile and, in stark contradiction to efficient risk sharing, negatively correlated with cross-country consumption ratios. This Paper shows that a standard international business cycle model with incomplete asset markets augmented with distribution services can account quantitatively for these properties of real exchange rates. Distribution services, intensive in local inputs, drive a wedge between producer and consumer prices, thus lowering the impact of terms-of-trade changes on optimal agents? decisions. This reduces the price elasticity of tradables separately from assumptions on preferences. Two very different patterns of the international transmission of positive technology shocks generate the observed degree of risk sharing: one associated with improving, the other with deteriorating terms of trade and real exchange rate. In both cases, large equilibrium swings in international relative prices magnify consumption risk due to country-specific shock, running counter to risk sharing. Suggestive evidence on the effect of productivity changes in US manufacturing is found in support of the fist transmission pattern, questioning the presumption that terms-of-trade movements in response to supply shocks invariably foster international risk pooling.

Keywords: Consumption; Real Exchange Rate; Correlation Puzzle; Distribution Cost; Incomplete Asset Markets

JEL Codes: F32; F33; F41


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
productivity shocks (O49)consumption risk (D11)
large swings in international relative prices (F31)risk sharing (D16)
large swings in international relative prices (F31)consumption risk (D11)
increase in productivity in domestic tradable sector (O49)depreciation of the real exchange rate (F31)
depreciation of the real exchange rate (F31)reduction in relative domestic wealth (F62)
reduction in relative domestic wealth (F62)increase in foreign consumption above domestic consumption (F69)
increase in productivity (O49)appreciation of the real exchange rate (F31)
appreciation of the real exchange rate (F31)reduction in foreign consumption relative to domestic consumption (F61)
productivity shock in U.S. manufacturing (L69)negative correlation between relative consumption and real exchange rate (F31)

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