The Story of the Real Exchange Rate

Working Paper: NBER ID: w28225

Authors: Oleg Itskhoki

Abstract: The real exchange rate (RER) measures relative price levels across countries, capturing deviations from purchasing power parity (PPP). RER is a key variable in international macroeconomic models as it is central to equilibrium conditions in both goods and asset markets. It is also one of the most starkly-behaved variables empirically, tightly co-moving with the nominal exchange rate and virtually uncorrelated with most other macroeconomic variables, nominal or real. This survey lays out an equilibrium framework of RER determination, focusing separately on each building block and discussing corresponding empirical evidence. We emphasize home bias and incomplete pass-through into prices with expenditure switching and goods market clearing, imperfect international risk sharing, country budget constraint and monetary policy regime. We show that RER is inherently a general-equilibrium variable, which depends on the full model structure and policy regime, and therefore partial theories like PPP are insufficient to explain it. We also discuss issues of stationarity and predictability of exchange rates.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: E31; F31; F41; G15


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
economic model structure (E10)RER (R50)
gaps between relative inflation rates (E31)RER (R50)
nominal exchange rate depreciation (F31)RER (R50)
home bias (F23)RER (R50)
incomplete pass-through into prices (D52)RER (R50)
expenditure switching (H50)RER (R50)
RER (R50)aggregate consumption (E20)
RER (R50)market clearing (D41)

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