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A Resolution of the Purchasing Power Parity Puzzle: Imperfect Knowledge and Long Swings
Author(s) -
Roman Frydman,
Michael Goldberg,
Søren Johansen,
Katarina Jusélius
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.1315233
Subject(s) - imperfect , purchasing power parity , economics , parity (physics) , monetary economics , econometrics , physics , philosophy , linguistics , exchange rate , particle physics
Asset prices undergo long swings that revolve around benchmark levels. In currency markets, ‡uctuations involve real exchange rates that are highly persistent and that move in near- parallel fashion with nominal rates. The inability to explain these two regularities with one model has been called the "purchasing power parity puzzle." In this paper, we trace the puzzle to exchange rate modelers'use of the "Rational Expectations Hypothesis."We show that once imperfect knowledge is recognized, a monetary model is able to account for the puzzle, as well as other salient features of the data, including the long-swings behavior of exchange rates.

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