Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Jeffrey A. Frankel
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Foreign exchange market efficiency
- 3 Purchasing power parity and the real exchange rate
- 4 Exchange rate determination: theories and evidence
- 5 New open-economy macroeconomics
- 6 Currency unions, pegged exchange rates and target zone models
- 7 Official intervention in the foreign exchange market
- 8 Models of currency crisis and speculative attack
- 9 Foreign exchange market microstructure
- Author index
- Subject index
3 - Purchasing power parity and the real exchange rate
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Jeffrey A. Frankel
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Foreign exchange market efficiency
- 3 Purchasing power parity and the real exchange rate
- 4 Exchange rate determination: theories and evidence
- 5 New open-economy macroeconomics
- 6 Currency unions, pegged exchange rates and target zone models
- 7 Official intervention in the foreign exchange market
- 8 Models of currency crisis and speculative attack
- 9 Foreign exchange market microstructure
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
The purchasing power parity (PPP) exchange rate is the exchange rate between two currencies which would equate the two relevant national price levels if expressed in a common currency at that rate, so that the purchasing power of a unit of one currency would be the same in both economies. This concept of PPP is often termed ‘absolute PPP’. ‘Relative PPP’ is said to hold when the rate of depreciation of one currency relative to another matches the difference in aggregate price inflation between the two countries concerned. If the nominal exchange rate is defined simply as the price of one currency in terms of another, then the real exchange rate is the nominal exchange rate adjusted for relative national price level differences. When PPP holds, the real exchange rate is a constant so that movements in the real exchange rate represent deviations from PPP. Hence, a discussion of the real exchange rate is tantamount to a discussion of PPP.
Although the term ‘purchasing power parity’ was coined as recently as eighty years ago (Cassel, 1918), it has a very much longer history in economics. While very few contemporary economists would hold that PPP holds continuously in the real world, ‘most instinctively believe in some variant of purchasing power parity as an anchor for long-run real exchange rates’ (Rogoff, 1996), and indeed the implication or assumption of much reasoning in international macroeconomics is that some form of PPP holds at least as a long-run relationship.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Economics of Exchange Rates , pp. 51 - 96Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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