scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Noise Trading and Exchange Rate Regimes

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, a framework based on endogenous noise trading is proposed to reduce the volatility of the exchange rate without any sacrifice in terms of monetary autonomy, and empirical evidence supports the existence of a non-fundamental channel in the link between exchange rate regimes and exchange rate volatility.
Abstract
Policy-makers often justify their choice of fixed exchange rate regimes as a shelter against nonfundamental influences in the foreign exchange market. This paper proposes a framework, based on endogenous noise trading, which makes sense of the policy-makers' view. We show that as a result of multiple equilibria, the model violates Mundell's "Incompatible Trinity:" under some conditions, it is possible to reduce the volatility of the exchange rate without any sacrifice in terms of monetary autonomy. We provide empirical evidence supportive of the existence of a nonfundamental channel in the link between exchange rate regimes and exchange rate volatility. If … markets come to believe exchange rate stability is not itself a significant policy objective, we should not be surprised that snowballing cumulative movements can develop that appear widely out of keeping with current balance-of-payments prospects or domestic price movements. At that point, freely floating exchange rates, instead of delivering on the promise of money autonomy for domestic monetary or other policies, can greatly complicate domestic economic management [Paul Volcker 1978–79, p. 9].

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
ReportDOI

The Six Major Puzzles in International Macroeconomics: Is There a Common Cause?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that by explicitly introducing costs of international trade (narrowly, transport costs, but more broadly, tariffs, nontariff barriers, and other trade costs), one can go far toward explaining a great number of the main empirical puzzles that international macroeconomists have struggled with over twenty-five years.
Book

The Microstructure Approach to Exchange Rates

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the economics of financial information and how microstructure tools help to clarify the types of information most relevant to exchange rates, and show how exchange-rate behavior previously thought to be particularly puzzling can be explained using the micro-structure approach.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exchange Rate Volatility and Productivity Growth: The Role of Financial Development

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that real exchange rate volatility can have a significant impact on productivity growth, but the effect depends critically on a country's level of financial development, and they also offer a simple monetary growth model in which real exchange-rate uncertainty exacerbates the negative investment effects of domestic credit market constraints.
Posted ContentDOI

Exchange Rate Pass-Through to Domestic Prices: Does the Inflationary Environment Matter?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived a pass-through relation based on new open economy macroeconomic models and found that a low inflationary environment leads to a low exchange rate passthrough to domestic prices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exchange rate pass-through to domestic prices: Does the inflationary environment matter?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived a pass-through relation based on new open-economy macroeconomic models and found strong evidence of a positive and significant association between the passthrough and the average inflation rate across countries and periods.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Noise Trader Risk in Financial Markets

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a simple overlapping generations model of an asset market in which irrational noise traders with erroneous stochastic beliefs both affect prices and earn higher expected returns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expectations and Exchange Rate Dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a theory of exchange rate movements under perfect capital mobility, a slow adjustment of goods markets relative to asset markets, and consistent expectations, and showed that along that path a monetary expansion causes the exchange rate to depreciate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Empirical exchange rate models of the seventies: Do they fit out of sample?

TL;DR: The authors compared the performance of various structural and time series exchange rate models, and found that a random walk model performs as well as any estimated model at one to twelve month horizons for the dollar/pound, dollar/mark, dollar /yen and trade-weighted dollar exchange rates.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of Intraday Patterns: Volume and Price Variability

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a theory that concentrated trading patterns arise endogenously as a result of the strategic behavior of liquidity traders and informed traders and provided a partial explanation for some of the recent empitical findings concerning the patterns of volume and price variability in intraday transaction data.
ReportDOI

The Six Major Puzzles in International Macroeconomics: Is There a Common Cause?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that by explicitly introducing costs of international trade (narrowly, transport costs, but more broadly, tariffs, nontariff barriers, and other trade costs), one can go far toward explaining a great number of the main empirical puzzles that international macroeconomists have struggled with over twenty-five years.
Related Papers (5)