Currency Wars, Trade Wars, and Global Demand

Working Paper: NBER ID: w29603

Authors: Olivier Jeanne

Abstract: This paper presents a tractable model of a global economy in which countries can use a broad range of policy instruments---the nominal interest rate, taxes on imports and exports, taxes on capital flows or foreign exchange interventions. Low demand may lead to unemployment because of downward nominal wage stickiness. Markov perfect equilibria with and without international cooperation are characterized in closed form. The welfare costs of trade and currency wars crucially depend on the state of global demand and on the policy instruments that are used by national policymakers. Countries have more incentives to deviate from free trade when global demand is low. Trade wars lower employment if they involve tariffs on imports but raise employment if they involve export subsidies. Tariff wars can lead to self-fulfilling global liquidity traps.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: F16; F31; F33; F38; F40; F42


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
low global demand (F69)increased unemployment (J65)
tariffs on imports (F13)reduced employment (J63)
export subsidies (H20)increased employment (J68)
tariff wars (F13)self-fulfilling liquidity traps (E41)
global demand (R22)likelihood of engaging in trade wars (F19)

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