Working Paper: NBER ID: w10245
Authors: Philippe Bacchetta; Eric van Wincoop
Abstract: While empirical evidence finds only a weak relationship between nominal exchange rates and macroeconomic fundamentals, forex markets participants often attribute exchange rate movements to a macroeconomic variable. The variables that matter, however, appear to change over time and some variable is typically taken as a scapegoat. For example, the current dollar weakness appears to be caused almost exclusively by the large current account deficit, while its previous strength was explained mainly by growth differentials. In this paper, we propose an explanation of this phenomenon in a simple monetary model of the exchange rate with noisy rational expectations, where investors have heterogeneous information on some structural parameter of the economy. In this context, there may be rational confusion about the true source of exchange rate fluctuations, so that if an unobservable variable affects the exchange rate, investors may attribute this movement to some current macroeconomic fundamental. We show that this effect applies only to variables with large imbalances. The model thus implies that the impact of macroeconomic variables on the exchange rate changes over time.
Keywords: No keywords provided
JEL Codes: F3; G1; E0
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
misattribution of fluctuations to observable macroeconomic fundamentals (E39) | exchange rate (F31) |
high exchange rate (F31) | misattribution to large persistence coefficient of money supply (E41) |
liquidity trades (G15) | exchange rate depreciation (F31) |
liquidity trades (G15) | impact of money supply as scapegoat is amplified (E51) |
rational confusion among investors (G40) | misattribution of fluctuations (E32) |
heterogeneous information among investors (D89) | rational confusion among investors (G40) |
investors' beliefs about peers' private signals (D83) | rational confusion among investors (G40) |