Exchange rate pass-through into import prices revisited: What drives it?
A large sample of developed and emerging economies is utilized to investigate import exchange rate pass-through. Panel models reveal that various economic aspects of the destination country can explain about one third of the total variation in pass-through elasticities and the remaining variation co...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of international money and finance 2012-06, Vol.31 (4), p.818-844 |
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creator | Brun-Aguerre, Raphael Fuertes, Ana-Maria Phylaktis, Kate |
description | A large sample of developed and emerging economies is utilized to investigate import exchange rate pass-through. Panel models reveal that various economic aspects of the destination country can explain about one third of the total variation in pass-through elasticities and the remaining variation comes largely in the form of unobserved country-specific effects. Inflation, exchange rate volatility, openness and relative wealth play a clear role as drivers of emerging markets’ pass-through whereas the output gap and protectionism appear influential more generally. Nonlinearity regarding large-versus-small changes in the exchange rate is quite pervasive. Our evidence challenges the widely-held view that pass-through has been universally falling in developed markets and that it is higher for emerging markets. The economic drivers are shown to play a role as out-of-sample predictors of pass-through. The findings confirm pricing-to-market theories and have implications for the optimal conduct of monetary policy. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.jimonfin.2012.01.009 |
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Panel models reveal that various economic aspects of the destination country can explain about one third of the total variation in pass-through elasticities and the remaining variation comes largely in the form of unobserved country-specific effects. Inflation, exchange rate volatility, openness and relative wealth play a clear role as drivers of emerging markets’ pass-through whereas the output gap and protectionism appear influential more generally. Nonlinearity regarding large-versus-small changes in the exchange rate is quite pervasive. Our evidence challenges the widely-held view that pass-through has been universally falling in developed markets and that it is higher for emerging markets. The economic drivers are shown to play a role as out-of-sample predictors of pass-through. 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subjects | Asymmetry Developing countries Economic models Economic theory Emerging markets Exchange rate Exchange rate policy Experimental methods Foreign direct investment Foreign exchange rates Imports International trade LDCs Monetary policy Pass-through Prices Protectionism Securities issues Studies |
title | Exchange rate pass-through into import prices revisited: What drives it? |
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