The Purchasing Power Parity Fallacy: Time to Reconsider the PPP Hypothesis
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2018
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Springer Science+Business Media
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Resumen
Traded good prices affect the real exchange rate first through their effect on the overall price level and second through their effect on the nominal exchange rate. Whereas the price level effect, which is positive in sign, is universally recognized, the nominal exchange rate effect, which is negative in sign, is routinely ignored. We calculate to which extent real exchange rate changes are accounted for by traded good prices and other components of the real exchange rate. We find that the nominal exchange rate effect neutralizes the price level effect entirely, suggesting that, contrary to popular belief, good market arbitrage is not conducive to purchasing power parity (the purchasing power parity fallacy). Rather than traded or non-traded good prices, the main driving force behind the real exchange rate is currency market pressure, a variable that, as we argue, is largely determined by the cumulative trade and capital flows of a country.
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Eleftheriou, M., & Müller-Plantenberg, N. A. (2018). The purchasing power parity fallacy: Time to reconsider the PPP hypothesis. Open Economies Review, 29, 481-515.