Abstract

This paper presents an empirical investigation of an important series called “economic fundamentals” derived from the flexible price monetary model of exchange rate determination. The model predicts that the nominal exchange rate is determined by the “economic fundamentals”, referred here as the series ft. As a result, the characteristics of the “economic fundamentals” process may influence the properties of the nominal exchange rate process. We will just use the term “fundamentals”. Nevertheless, many exchange rate models found in the literature assume an ad-hoc process for ft ignoring the fact that the specification of this process can be formally derived within the framework of the monetary model. Using data for several countries on GDP and money supplies, we construct the series ft according to the monetary model specification, and we examine some important characteristics of its empirical distribution such as skewness, kurtosis, stationarity, ARCH and GARCH properties. We observe that the series is not exactly normally distributed, as commonly assumed in many target zone models. This investigation essentially helps with modeling exchange rate and more importantly in the analysis of exchange rate target zones modeling by identifying potential restrictions that need to be taken into consideration when choosing a process for the modeling of the “economic fundamentals”.

Highlights

  • This paper presents an empirical investigation of an important series called “economic fundamentals” derived from the flexible price monetary model of exchange rate determination

  • Using data for several countries on GDP and money supplies, we construct the series ft according to the monetary model specification, and we examine some important characteristics of its empirical distribution such as skewness, kurtosis, stationarity, Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (ARCH) and Generalized ARCH (GARCH) properties

  • We explore whether the series exhibit Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (ARCH) or Generalized ARCH (GARCH) effects

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Summary

Introduction

Hyppolite the Breakdown of the Bretton Woods system as a model of nominal exchange rate determination. Dornbusch’s sticky-price monetary model allows for short-run overshooting of the nominal exchange rate above its long-run value that is associated with purchasing power parity (PPP). According to Frankel (1979), the Sticky-price monetary model contains a deficiency in that it does not explicitly incorporate shortrun difference in secular rates of inflation between the two countries. To overcome this shortcoming, he introduced the real interest differential monetary model that combines elements of both the flexible-price and sticky-price monetary models

Derivation of the Exchange Rate Process
Some Sample Statistics
Stationarity of the Fundamentals
ARCH and GARCH Effects for the Fundamentals
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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