Rethinking the Link Between Exchange Rates & Inflation: Misperceptions and New Approaches

Similar documents
Shocks vs Structure:

External MPC Unit Discussion Paper No. 50 Shocks versus structure: explaining differences in exchange rate pass-through across countries and time

Discussion of Conditional exchange rate pass-through: evidence from Sweden

Once one starts thinking about exchange rates.

Discussion Shocks vs Structure: Explaining Differences in Exchange Rate Pass-Through across Countries and Time Forbes, Hjortsoe and Nenova

The CNB Forecasting and Policy Analysis System in a historical perspective

Conditional exchange rate pass-through: evidence from Sweden

The link between labor costs and price inflation in the euro area

Czech Economy and Monetary Policy

Macroeconomic Modelling at the Central Bank of Brazil. Angelo M. Fasolo Research Department

Volume 35, Issue 1. Thai-Ha Le RMIT University (Vietnam Campus)

IB Economics The Level of Overall Economic Activity 2.4: The Business Cycle Activity

Exchange Rate Pass-through in India

Comments on Foreign Effects of Higher U.S. Interest Rates. James D. Hamilton. University of California at San Diego.

Global Imbalances and Spillovers

Supplementary Appendix. July 22, 2016

Inflation Targeting and Inflation Prospects in Canada

Final Exam. Part I. (60 minutes) Answer each of the following questions in the time allowed.

Fixing the Astrolabe:

EC910 Econometrics B. Exchange Rate Pass-Through and Inflation Dynamics in. the United Kingdom: VAR analysis of Exchange Rate.

Discussion of Trend Inflation in Advanced Economies

Core Inflation and the Business Cycle

If the Fed sneezes, who gets a cold?

Review of the literature on the comparison

Credit Shocks and the U.S. Business Cycle. Is This Time Different? Raju Huidrom University of Virginia. Midwest Macro Conference

HAS GLOBALIZATION CHANGED THE INFLATION PROCESS?

On the size of fiscal multipliers: A counterfactual analysis

Effects of monetary policy shocks on the trade balance in small open European countries

Workshop on resilience

Bank Lending Shocks and the Euro Area Business Cycle

CONFIDENCE AND ECONOMIC ACTIVITY: THE CASE OF PORTUGAL*

Has Globalization Changed the Inflation Process?

Fiscal Policy: Ready for The Next Shock?

The source of real and nominal exchange rate fluctuations in Thailand: Real shock or nominal shock

MONETARY ECONOMICS Objective: Overview of Theoretical, Empirical and Policy Issues in Modern Monetary Economics

Global and National Macroeconometric Modelling: A Long-run Structural Approach Overview on Macroeconometric Modelling Yongcheol Shin Leeds University

Monetary policy and exchange rates

Slack and Cyclically Sensitive Inflation by Stock and Watson

Estimating Macroeconomic Models of Financial Crises: An Endogenous Regime-Switching Approach

For Online Publication. The macroeconomic effects of monetary policy: A new measure for the United Kingdom: Online Appendix

Characteristics of the euro area business cycle in the 1990s

Macroeconomics I International Group Course

Mood Swings and Business Cycles: Evidence from Sign Restrictions

Exchange Rates and Fundamentals: A General Equilibrium Exploration

Part I (45 points; Mark your answers in a SCANTRON)

Government Spending Multipliers in Good Times and in Bad: Evidence from U.S. Historical Data

MONETARY POLICY TRANSMISSION MECHANISM IN ROMANIA OVER THE PERIOD 2001 TO 2012: A BVAR ANALYSIS

INFLATION TARGETING AND COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES IN SOUTH AFRICA. Rashad Cassim South African Reserve Bank Research Department

Ten Years after the Financial Crisis: What Have We Learned from. the Renaissance in Fiscal Research?

Heterogeneous Firm, Financial Market Integration and International Risk Sharing

Nepal Rastra Bank Research Department Baluwatar, Kathmandu

Interpreting sterling exchange rate movements

Liquidity Matters: Money Non-Redundancy in the Euro Area Business Cycle

Time-varying wage Phillips curves in the euro area with a new measure for labor market slack

September 2017 ECB staff macroeconomic projections for the euro area 1

MA Advanced Macroeconomics: 11. The Smets-Wouters Model

Measuring Domestically Generated Inflation

Using VARs to Estimate a DSGE Model. Lawrence Christiano

Discussion of Oil and the Great Moderation by Nakov and Pescatori

The Euro Plus Pact: Competitiveness and External Capital Flows in the EU Countries

How do Macroeconomic Shocks affect Expectations? Lessons from Survey Data

Notes on the monetary transmission mechanism in the Czech economy

A measure of supercore inflation for the eurozone

Stochastic analysis of the OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook

The Impact of Monetary Policy on Inequality in the UK. An Empirical Analysis

Administered Prices and Inflation Targeting in Thailand Kanin Peerawattanachart

Why are real interest rates so low? Evidence from a structural VAR with sign restrictions

Fiscal spillovers in the Euro area

Discussion of The Term Structure of Growth-at-Risk

THE EFFECTS OF FISCAL POLICY ON EMERGING ECONOMIES. A TVP-VAR APPROACH

The Bank of England s forecasting platform

Prospects for Inflation in a High Pressure Economy: Is the Phillips Curve Dead or is It Just Hibernating?

Volume 38, Issue 1. The dynamic effects of aggregate supply and demand shocks in the Mexican economy

Macroeconomic Forecasting and Policy Analysis

Forecasting and Policy Analysis with Trend-Cycle BVARs

Discussion of DSGE Models for Monetary Policy. Discussion of

Exchange Rate Pass-Through: First versus Second-Round Effects

The Aggregate and Distributional Effects of Financial Globalization: Evidence from Macro and Sectoral Data

IMPACT OF SOME OVERSEAS MONETARY VARIABLES ON INDONESIA: SVAR APPROACH

1 Business-Cycle Facts Around the World 1

Inflation and Relative Price Asymmetry

Recent developments in the euro area suggest. What caused current account imbalances in euro area periphery countries?

EQ: How Do Changes in AD and SRAS Affect Real GDP, Unemployment, & Price Level?

Creditor countries and debtor countries: some asymmetries in the dynamics of external wealth accumulation

Discussion of The Role of Expectations in Inflation Dynamics

The reasons why inflation has moved away from the target, and the outlook for inflation.

Designing Scenarios for Macro Stress Testing (Financial System Report, April 2016)

Samba: Stochastic Analytical Model with a Bayesian Approach. DSGE Model Project for Brazil s economy

Business Cycle Theory

NOTES ON THE BANK OF ENGLAND OPTION IMPLIED PROBABILITY DENSITY FUNCTIONS

Discussion of paper by Gaston Gelos and Yulia Ustyugova on "Inflation responses to commodity price shocks how and why do countries differ?

Discussion of. Size Premium Waves. by Bernard Kerskovic, Thilo Kind, and Howard Kung. Vadim Elenev. Johns Hopkins Carey

Fiscal spillovers in the Euro area

Online Appendixes to Missing Disinflation and Missing Inflation: A VAR Perspective

Legal services sector forecasts

HOUSEHOLD DEBT AND BUSINESS CYCLES WORLDWIDE

Keynesian Views On The Fiscal Multiplier

Bank Contagion in Europe

Risk, Uncertainty and Monetary Policy

Capital Flows, House Prices, and the Macroeconomy. Evidence from Advanced and Emerging Market Economies

Transcription:

Rethinking the Link Between Exchange Rates & Inflation: Misperceptions and New Approaches Kristin Forbes External MPC Member Bank of England EACBN discussion forum, Bank of England 28 September 215

Currency Wars

Sterling Exchange Rate

Comments Today 1. What do we Know?: Current Evidence on How Exchange Rate Movements Affect Inflation 2. Misperceptions? Pass-Through is Greater in Sectors with a Greater Import Content Pass-through is Greater in Sectors that are More Tradable and Internationally Competitive Pass-Through is Constant Across Time 3. A New Approach: Consider The Shock Driving the Initial Movement in the Exchange Rate 4. Conclusions

Preview: New Approach Needed Independent research project with Ida Hjortsoe and Tsveti Nenova at BOE Paper: The Shocks Matter: Improving our Estimates of Exchange Rate Pass-Through Also draws from recent speech at MMF conference in Cardiff, Much Ado About Something Important. Does not represent official BoE views Improves our framework for thinking about how exchange rates affect prices Need to start with the source of the shock Similar to thinking about oil price movements Intuitive that companies respond differently Can explain different pass-through at different times (crisis vs. today) Important implications for how we forecast inflation and set monetary policy COMMENTS APPRECIATED!

What do we Know?: Current Evidence on How Exchange Rate Movements Affect Inflation

Extensive Academic Literature Many contributions to different aspects of pass-through Gopinath (215): currency of invoicing Burnstein and Gopinath (214) for overview Evidence that changes over time in different countries: Marazzi et al. (25), Gagnon and Ihrig (24), Fleer et al. (215) Many contributions to factors behind exchange rate movements Clarida and Gali (1994), Eichenbaum and Evans (1995), Engle (213) Papers suggesting different exchange-rate shocks have different effects on economy Klein (199), Astley, Pain and Smith (29) Theoretical model: Corsetti, Leduc, and Dedola (29) Empirical evidence: Corsetti, Leduc and Dedola (28), Kirby and Meaning (214), An and Wang (211), Shambaugh (28)

Exchange rate pass-through: After movements in the sterling/euro exchange rate

Rough Rules of Thumb BOE rough estimates: 1 st stage pass-through to import prices: 6 9%, quick (about 1 year) 2 nd stage pass-through to CPI: 3% based on import intensity of CPI, slow (about 3-5 years) Overall pass-through coefficient: 2% - 3% Recent 17% appreciation CPI by 3% to 5% over several years But a closer looks suggests this is missing something. Some assumed patterns don t hold up well in the data Rate of pass-through seems to change sharply over short-periods of time

3 Misperceptions 1. Pass-Through is Greater in Sectors with a Greater Import Content

Check Using Micro Data Price data for 85 goods and services in UK headline CPI index from 1996 through 28 Component-level regressions to calculate price sensitivity in each sector to movements in sterling Controlling for changes in oil prices, foreign export prices, UK output gap Estimate sterling sensitivity coefficient Are sectors with a higher import content more sensitive to sterling s fluctuations?

Sterling Sensitivity & Import Intensity Confirmed with more formal regression analysis: negative correlation

3 Misperceptions 1. Pass-Through is Greater in Sectors with a Greater Import Content 2. Pass-Through is Greater in Sectors that are More Tradable and Internationally Competitive

Check Using Micro Data Use same measure of sterling sensitivity Calculate tradability by comparing price levels of goods for 3 different CPI components in the UK and the EU15 2 measures of law-of-one price (LOOP), focusing on average price levels and deviations Are sectors that are more tradable also more sensitive to sterling s fluctuations?

Tradability (x-axis) and sterling sensitivity (y-axis) LOOP 1 LOOP 2 Note: LOOP1 on x-axis (the low er the measure the more tradable is the good); price sensitivity to sterling on y-axis (the higher is the coefficient, the more sensitive is the price of the good to sterling). If LOOP1 w as a good measure of tradability you should get a negative relationship. Note: LOOP2 on x-axis (the low er the measure the more tradable is the good); price sensitivity to sterling on y-axis (the higher is the coefficient, the more sensitive is the price of the good to sterling). If LOOP2 w as a good measure of tradability you should get a negative relationship.

Tradability (x-axis) and sterling sensitivity (y-axis): excluding energy, fruit and vegetables LOOP 1 LOOP 2 Note: Narrow LOOP1 excluding energy and fruit and vegetables and sterling sensitivity on x-axis. Note: Narrow LOOP2 excluding energy and fruit and vegetables and sterling sensitivity on x-axis.

3 Misperceptions 1. Pass-Through is Greater in Sectors with a Greater Import Content 2. Pass-Through is Greater in Sectors that are More Tradable and Internationally Competitive 3. Pass-through is Constant over Time

Rolling 1-year Estimated Pass-Through to Inflation Calculation: rolling 1-year exchange rate coefficient from aggregate CPI Phillips curve Note: A higher coefficient implies that prices fall more in response to an appreciation, i.e. greater exchange rate pass-through.

Rolling 1-year Estimated Pass-Through to Import Prices Calculation: rolling 1-year exchange rate coefficient from OLS regression of UK import prices on the exchange rate and foreign export prices Note: A higher coefficient implies that prices fall more in response to an appreciation, i.e. greater exchange rate pass-through.

Where do we stand? --not in a good place! 3 puzzles Extremely frustrating Are we missing something?

A New Approach: Consider Why the Exchange Rate Moved in the First Place Work with Ida Hjortsoe and Tsveti Nenova, The Shock Matters: Improving Our Estimates of Exchange Rate Pass-Through

Approach SVAR model, quarterly data from 1993q1 to 215q1 6 domestic & global shocks which can effect the ER & other variables UK supply -- Exogenous exchange rate UK demand -- Global supply UK monetary policy -- Global demand (broadly defined) Look at impact on 6 variables Exchange rate (nominal ERI) --Import prices Consumer prices --GDP Interest rates (shadow) --Foreign export prices Identification criteria Based on economic theory & small-open economy DSGE model (see paper) Zero short- and long-run restrictions plus sign restrictions

Identification Restrictions UK supply shock UK demand shock UK monetary policy shock Exogenous exchange rate shock Short-run restrictions UK GDP + + _ UK CPI - + _ - UK interest rate + + -/ UK nominal ERI + + + UK import prices World (ex-uk) export prices Global supply shock + Global demand shock Long-run restrictions UK GDP UK CPI UK interest rate UK nominal ERI UK import prices World (ex-uk) export prices Note: A + ( - ) sign indicates that the impulse response of the variable in question is restricted to be positive (negative) in the quarter the shock considered hits. A indicates that the response of the variable in question is restricted to be zero (either on impact or in the long run).

Scenario Sterling appreciates 1% after 4 quarters Set magnitude of shocks as needed Estimation details Bayesian methods with standard Minnesota priors Standard error, percentiles & confidence intervals based on Gibbs sampling procedure, 1, repetitions 2 lags of endogenous variables preferred by Schwartz information criteria Results robust to 1 lag Sign restrictions imposed for 2 periods

UK supply shock 6 GDP 1 CPI 1 Shadow BR 4 2-2 -1-2 5-5 -4 2 4-3 2 4-1 2 4 5 Exchange rate 5 Import prices Foreign export prices 5-5 2 4-5 2 4-5 2 4

UK demand shock.5 GDP 1.5 CPI.4.2 Shadow BR -.5 2 4 -.5-1 2 4 -.2 -.4 2 4 4 Exchange rate 4 Import prices Foreign export prices 4 2 2 2-2 -2-2 -4 2 4-4 2 4-4 2 4

UK monetary policy shock.5 GDP 1.5 CPI.4.2 Shadow BR -.5 2 4 -.5-1 2 4 -.2 -.4 2 4 4 Exchange rate 4 Import prices Foreign export prices 4 2 2 2-2 -2-2 -4 2 4-4 2 4-4 2 4

UK exchange rate shock.5 GDP 1.5 CPI.4.2 Shadow BR -.5 2 4 -.5-1 2 4 -.2 -.4 2 4 4 Exchange rate 4 Import prices Foreign export prices 4 2 2 2-2 -2-2 -4 2 4-4 2 4-4 2 4

Global supply shock 6 GDP 2 CPI 4 Shadow BR 4 2 2-2 -2 2 4-4 2 4-2 2 4 1 Exchange rate 1 Import prices Foreign export prices 1 5 5 5-5 -5-5 -1 2 4-1 2 4-1 2 4

Global demand shock 6 GDP 2 CPI 4 Shadow BR 4 2 2-2 -2 2 4-4 2 4-2 2 4 1 Exchange rate 1 Import prices Foreign export prices 1 5 5 5-5 -5-5 -1 2 4-1 2 4-1 2 4

Pass-through to import prices by shock* * Median ratio of import price response to exchange rate response

Pass-through to consumer prices by shock* * Median ratio of CPI response to exchange rate response

Forecast error variance decomposition Variable Horizon (quarters) Proportion of variance explained by shocks to: Supply Demand Monetary policy Exchange rate Foreign supply Foreign demand GDP 1.5.8.4.6.14.17 2.47.5.3.4.28.13 CPI 1.14.15.17.7.33.13 2.15.12.16.7.36.15 Shadow BR 1.22.1.7.12.25.25 2.21.9.8.5.29.28 Exchange rate 1.9.28.18.22.12.11 2.11.23.15.19.17.15 Import prices 1.8.11.22.12.23.24 2.8.1.19.12.26.26 Foreign export prices 1.....48.52 2.1.1.1..46.51

Historical Shock Decomposition of Changes in Sterling ERI

Shock decomposition of large exchange rate changes and implied pass-through coefficients Shocks 1996/7 appreciation 27/8 depreciation 213- appreciation Full sample FEVD* Supply 1% 21% 14% 1% Demand 33% 2% 22% 25% Monetary policy 19% 11% 17% 17% Exchange rate 24% 13% % 21% Global supply 6% 18% 25% 14% Global demand 8% 17% 23% 13% Implied ERPT to import prices (not controlling for world export prices) -.67 -.86 -.99 -.79 Implied ERPT to consumer prices (not controlling for world export prices) -.8 -.16 -.18 -.13 Implied ERPT to import prices (assuming 6% pass-through from world export prices to import prices)** -.69 -.9 -.63 Implied ERPT to consumer prices (with additional assumption of 3% CPI import intensity)** -.9 -.17 -.8 * Average FEV contribution of each shock over first eight quarters. ** Based on the actual peak-to-trough or trough-to-peak changes in sterling ERI and corresponding changes in world export prices including oil.

Conclusions

Key Points Challenges predicting how exchange rate movements affect inflation Some basic priors do not hold well Pass-through can change sharply over time Our approach puts more emphasis on the underlying reason why the exchange rate moves Not the full story especially for differences across countries More work needed (apprec./deprec, non-linearities, time shifts) But important progress explaining changes in pass-through across time Particularly helpful to understand recent UK puzzles Should improve our ability to forecast inflation and adjust monetary policy appropriately in the future

Extra

Historical shock decomposition of changes in UK import prices

Historical shock decomposition of CPI inflation

Historical shock decomposition of UK GDP growth

Historical shock decomposition of shadow Bank Rate (detrended)

Historical shock decomposition of world (ex-uk) export prices

Pass-through to import prices by shock (detailed table) Period Percentile Supply Demand Monetary policy Exchange rate Global supply Global demand 1 5 -.4 -.3 -.6 -.3.2.1 5-2.8 -.7-3.7-1.4-7.2-6. 95 1.9 1. 1.9 1.3 6.8 7.2 5 5 -.67 -.34 -.84 -.49-1.28-1.48 5-3.1-1.43-3.44-1.17-6.59-8.61 95 1.58 3.33 2.35.82 3.82 5.83 2 5 -.61 -.41 -.91 -.48-1.11-1.38 5-3.83-3.31-5.83-1.11-6.45-5.77 95 3.69 3.59 3.57.49 4.61 2.46

Pass-through to consumer prices by shock (detailed table) Period Percentile Supply Demand Monetary policy Exchange rate Global supply Global demand 1 5..1 -.2 -.1.1. 5-1.5. -1.6 -.6-1.8 -.9 95 1.3.4.. 1.9 1.2 5 5 -.2.18 -.27 -.1 -.37 -.22 5-2.53. -2.23 -.55-2.49-1.74 95 2.14 1.4 -.3 -.2 2.22 1.18 2 5 -.8.21 -.24 -.12 -.3 -.2 5-3.31-1.36-3.61 -.58-4.5-1.98 95 3.26 1.99 3.65 -.1 3.5 1.9