The Dornbusch overshooting model. The short run and long run together

Similar documents
7.1 Assumptions: prices sticky in SR, but flex in MR, endogenous expectations

FETP/MPP8/Macroeconomics/Riedel. Money, Interest Rates and the Exchange Rate

1 Figure 1 (A) shows what the IS LM model looks like for the case in which the Fed holds the

Open Economy Macroeconomics, Aalto University SB, Spring 2017

Keynesian Theory (IS-LM Model): how GDP and interest rates are determined in Short Run with Sticky Prices.

Lecture 9: Exchange rates

Lectures 24 & 25: Determination of exchange rates

Lecture 5: Flexible prices - the monetary model of the exchange rate. Lecture 6: Fixed-prices - the Mundell- Fleming model

1) Real and Nominal exchange rates are highly positively correlated. 2) Real and nominal exchange rates are well approximated by a random walk.

Macroeconomics 1 Lecture 11: ASAD model

The Mundell-Fleming Dornbush Model

VII. Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

Suggested Solutions to Assignment 2

DMF model and exchange rate overshooting. Lecture 1, MSc Open Economy Macroeconomics, Birmingham, Autumn 2015 Tony Yates

Introduction to Economic Fluctuations. Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko

(1) UIP : R = R f + Ee E

University of Colorado at Boulder. Department of Economics. ECON 4423: INTERNATIONAL FINANCE Term Test 2 Fall 2005

Exam #2 Review Questions (Answers) ECNS 303 October 31, 2011

E 3 E 2 E 4 E 1 I 2 I 1 R (M/P 2 ) (M/P 1 ) L 2 L 1. Chapter 14

International Economics Fall 2011 Exchange Rate Determination, Part 1. Paul Deng Sept. 27/29, 2011

Chapter 9. Introduction to Economic Fluctuations

Overshooting of Exchange Rate and New Open Economy Macroeconomics : Some Implications for Japanese Yen and Korean Won

Chapter 10 Aggregate Demand I CHAPTER 10 0

Chapter 9 Introduction to Economic Fluctuations

The Global Economy II I (4.5)

1 Question 1. Professor Christiano Economics 311, Winter 2005 Solution to Midterm #1

Test Review. Question 1. Answer 1. Question 2. Answer 2. Question 3. Econ 719 Test Review Test 1 Chapters 1,2,8,3,4,7,9. Nominal GDP.

Introduction The Story of Macroeconomics. September 2011

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Faculty of Arts and Science. April Examination 2016 ECO 209Y. Duration: 2 hours

Christina Zauner. June 8 th, Department of Economics, University of Vienna. The Goods Market of an Open Economy. Christina Zauner.

Chapter 8 A Short Run Keynesian Model of Interdependent Economies

Archimedean Upper Conservatory Economics, October 2016

Suggested Answers Problem Set # 5 Economics 501 Daniel

Chapter 13. Introduction. Goods Market Equilibrium. Modeling Strategy. Nominal Exchange Rate: A Convention. The Nominal Exchange Rate

Lecture #15: Overview of Normal Operation of Fixed Exchange Rate Regime

Outline of model. The supply side The production function Y = F (K, L) A closed economy, market-clearing model

New Keynesian Model. Prof. Eric Sims. Fall University of Notre Dame. Sims (ND) New Keynesian Model Fall / 20

International Monetary Economics

Chapter 9 Chapter 10

Lecture 12: Economic Fluctuations. Rob Godby University of Wyoming

Chapter 18 Exchange Rate Theories (modified version)

Deriving Firm s Supply Curve

Real GDP Growth in the United States Introduction to Economic Fluctuations slide 2.

PART XII: SHORT-RUN ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY. Chapter 33

Portfolio Balance Models of Exchange

MACROECONOMICS II - IS-LM (Part 1)

SHORT-RUN FLUCTUATIONS. David Romer. University of California, Berkeley. First version: August 1999 This revision: January 2018

Simple Notes on the ISLM Model (The Mundell-Fleming Model)

FETP/MPP8/Macroeconomics/Riedel. General Equilibrium in the Short Run II The IS-LM model

Lecture 4. Short run economic fluctuations.

III. 9. IS LM: the basic framework to understand macro policy continued Text, ch 11

A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy. Lecture 9

YORK UNIVERSITY. Suggested Solutions to Part C (C3(d) and C4)

Solutions To Problem Set Five

Mankiw Chapter 10. Introduction to Economic Fluctuations. Introduction to Economic Fluctuations CHAPTER 10

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory II, Winter 2007 Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko Solutions to Problem Set 4 (35 points).

3. If the price of a British pound increases from $1.50 per pound to $1.80 per pound, we say that:

= C + I + G + NX = Y 80r

Lecture 22. Aggregate demand and aggregate supply

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Shocks, Credibility and Macroeconomic Dynamics in small open economies

Part2 Multiple Choice Practice Qs

Rutgers University Spring Econ 336 International Balance of Payments Professor Roberto Chang. Problem Set 2. Deadline: March 1st.

Macroeconomics I International Group Course

Lecture 1: Traditional Open Macro Models and Monetary Policy

Lecture 4. Short run economic fluctuations.

Exchange rateovershooting-the Dornbuschmodel

1. The short-run asset market approach model assumes A) fixed money supply B) fixed nominal exchange rate C) sticky price D) growing national income

Class 5. The IS-LM model and Aggregate Demand

Chapter 10 Aggregate Demand I

Inflation targeting: A supplement to Open Economy Macroeconomics

University of Toronto July 21, 2010 ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #2

Monetary Economics: Macro Aspects, 19/ Henrik Jensen Department of Economics University of Copenhagen

Credit Crises, Precautionary Savings and the Liquidity Trap October (R&R Quarterly 31, 2016Journal 1 / of19

Foreign exchange market based on chapter 14 (Exchange Rates and the Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach) of the textbook

Chapter 10 (part 2) Exchange Rates, Business Cycles, and Macroeconomic Policy in the Open Economy. Copyright 2009 Pearson Education Canada

1 Non-traded goods and the real exchange rate

OCR Economics A-level

THE KEYNESIAN MODEL IN THE SHORT AND LONG RUN

Dynamics of the Swiss Franc Appreciation Explained by the Dornbusch Model an Approach

A. What is the value of the tax increase multiplier if the MPC is.80? B. Consumption changes by 400 and disposable income by 100. What is the MPC?

FETP/MPP8/Macroeconomics/Riedel. General Equilibrium in the Short Run

Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment

ECO 301 MACROECONOMIC THEORY UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Dr. S. Nuray Akin. PRACTICE FOR MIDTERM EXAM II and HW 4

A dynamic approach to short run economic fluctuations. The DAD/DAS model. Part 3 The long run equilibrium & short run fluctuations.

Intermediate Macroeconomics-ECO 3203

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory II, Winter 2009 Solutions to Problem Set 2.

6. The Aggregate Demand and Supply Model

ECON 3560/5040 Week 8-9

14.02 Solutions Quiz III Spring 03

Chapter 10/9. Introduction to Economic Fluctuations 10/8/2017. The chapter covers: Facts about the business cycle

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 11. Classical and Keynesian Macro Analyses

Chapter 19 MONEY SUPPLIES, PRICE LEVELS, AND THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS

Introduction. Over the long run, real GDP grows about 3% per year on average.

So, let s go through the model equations. We start with what is called the uncovered interest parity condition:

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Final Exam

AS-AD Model. Prof. Irina A. Telyukova UBC Economics 345 Fall 2008

Introduction to Economic Fluctuations

Notes 6: Examples in Action - The 1990 Recession, the 1974 Recession and the Expansion of the Late 1990s

Transcription:

The Dornbusch overshooting model. The short run and long run together

Overview of the Dornbusch model Weaknesses of preceding models: Long run Monetary Model: exchange rate far more volatile than monetary variables (and prices) Short run model: fixed prices valid only in short run. Dornbusch (1976) hybrid: Short run properties of Keynesian models Long run properties of the Long Run (Monetary) Model.

Overview of Dornbusch model Empirical observation: financial markets adjust to shocks far more rapidly than goods markets (i.e. price stickiness keeps Y away from LR equilibrium). Consequence for the model: in the short run, financial markets have to over adjust in order to compensate for sluggish goods markets (OVERSHOOTING). With prices fixed in the short run, any change in the nominal money supply changes real balances, requiring the interest rate to adjust to clear the money market In the long run, prices adjust fully, returning all real variables to their preshock levels, but leaving the nominal exchange rate at the new equilibrium level predicted by the long run model.

Definition of overshooting

Outline of the model 1. Small open economy (so P*, R* exogenous) 2. Start from full equilibrium, with inflation and exchange rate depreciation both zero 3. In the short run, prices are fixed 4. Financial markets adjust instantaneously. Investors are risk neutral, so that UIRP holds always R R * E e E e E ( E E t t ) Where E is the long run value of exchange rate

The short and long run In the long run, the long run exchange rate is set according to the long run (monetary) model Deviations from the long run equilibrium exchange rate result from the following assumptions: The price level is sticky. Aggregate supply curve is horizontal in the immediate impact phase But of course it is vertical in long-run equilibrium. E

How to solve the model General strategy to analyse the effect of a disturbance (e.g. a money supply increase): start from the end and work backwards. Determine what happens: 1. in the long run, when the system has returned to full equilibrium 2. the impact effect, at the moment of the disturbance 3. finally, in the transition from 2 to 1.

The short run Deviations from the long run nominal exchange rate happen because prices are sticky, Sticky prices cause R to deviate from its long run value (when inflation is zero at home and abroad, in the long run R=R*)

Monetary expansion THE LONG RUN M goes up. Prices increase; REAL money supply is unchanged Domestic (nominal) exchange rate depreciates The real exchange rate does not change E=home/foreign, so the new long run value of E is higher If π=π*=0, then R=R* (nominal rates)

Monetary expansion The SHORT RUN Money supply increases Prices are fixed, real money supply goes up Excess supply of money: R<R* UIP holds, so investors expect that the home exchange rate will APPRECIATE (over time E will go down) But wait the new long run value is higher! How can we combine this contradiction? Exchange rate has to go very high, in order to decrease, and still stay high. Yes, that sounds strange

Short-Run and Long-Run Effects of an Increase in the U.S. Money Supply (for simplicity given real output, Y)

Monetary expansion The short run, point 3: no expectations of future depreciation of Home currency The short run, point 2: since M is high, we expect that in the future P will go up According to PPP this implies a future depreciation of Home currency So today, we end up in 2 a big depreciation.

Money, Prices, and Exchange Rates in the Long Run A permanent increase in a country s money supply causes a proportional long-run depreciation of its currency. However, the dynamics of the model predict a large depreciation first and a smaller subsequent appreciation. A permanent decrease in a country s money supply causes a proportional long-run appreciation of its currency. However, the dynamics of the model predict a large appreciation first and a smaller subsequent depreciation.

Time Paths of U.S. Economic Variables after a Permanent Increase in the U.S. Money Supply

Exchange Rate Overshooting The exchange rate is said to overshoot when its immediate response to a change is greater than its long-run response. Overshooting is predicted to occur when monetary policy has an immediate effect on interest rates, but not on prices and (expected) inflation. Overshooting helps explain why exchange rates are so volatile.

Test yourself in class exercise Assume that the money demand at Home goes up What happens to nominal exchange rate in the long run? What happens to R in the SR? What does the market expect? What happens with E now?

Main issue Price stickiness in the short run causes a deviation from the long run equilibrium People expect that in the future prices will change (usually) and nominal exchange rate will change Therefore people expect future changes of the exchange rate These future adjustments cause the exchange rate to overshoot