Abstract

The paper shows the results of an empirical analysis of the relative variant of purchasing power parity (PPP) for dinar-euro and dinar-dollar ex-change rates. The study was conducted for the period January 2007 - August 2013 and involved testing of the empirical foundation of strong and weak PPP forms. The first part of the strong PPP form testing comes down to examination of non-stationarity of dinar-euro and dinar-dollar real exchange rates by use of standard unit root tests (ADF, PP, KPSS, DF-GLS). Considering that the results obtained by different tests differ, the final conclusion about the non-stationarity of the series has been reached on the basis of their correlogram and ordinary and partial autocorrelation functions. Having in mind reduced power and bias of standard unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks, the initial findings have been checked by use of the LS (Lee and Strazicich) unit root test for models A and C with one and two structural breaks. The findings confirm the non-stationarity of the real exchange rates. Johansen and Engle-Granger cointegration tests have been used to test weak PPP form, so as to examine the presence of a long-run equilibrium relation-ship between the nominal exchange rates and inflation differentials, i.e. the corresponding price indices. The test results show that the series are not cointegrated. The non-stationarity of the real exchange rates and the lack of cointegration between the series indicate that PPP, regardless of the form, has no empirical support. Such results do not come as surprise considering that the analysis refers to a relatively short period of time, and the fact that even the strongest supporters of PPP have acknowledged that PPP is not a short-run relationship.

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