Monetary policy and inferential expectations of exchange rates |
| |
Authors: | Gordon D. Menzies Daniel John Zizzo |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. University of Technology Sydney, Australia;2. Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis, Australian National University, Australia;3. University of East Anglia, United Kingdom;1. Universidad EAFIT, School of Economics and Finance, Carrera 49 Número 7 Sur 50, Medellín, Colombia;2. London Metropolitan University, Business School, 84 Moorgate, London EC2M 6SQ, UK;3. Kingston University, School of Economics, History and Politics, Penrhyn Road, Kingston upon Thames KT1 2EE, UK;1. Chaire d’information financière et organisationnelle, ESG-UQAM, Laboratory for Research in Statistics and Probability, LRSP, Université du Québec (Outaouais), 101 St-Jean-Bosco, Gatineau, Québec, Canada;2. Université du Québec (Montréal), École des sciences de la gestion, 315 est Ste-Catherine, R-3555, Montréal, Québec, Canada;3. Chaire d’information financière et organisationnelle, ESG-UQAM, Université du Québec (Outaouais), Canada;1. Helmut Schmidt University Hamburg, Germany;2. University of Göttingen, Germany;3. Harvard School of Public Health, USA;1. Plymouth Business School, Plymouth University, Drake Circus, Plymouth, United Kingdom;2. Department of Economics and Finance, United Arab Emirates University, United Arab Emirates;3. Business School, New York Institute of Technology, CERT Technology Park, Moroor Road, 5464 Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates |
| |
Abstract: | We present a macroeconomic market experiment to isolate the impact of monetary shocks on the exchange rate, as an alternative to SVAR identification. In a non-stochastic treatment, covered interest rate parity holds and predicted exchange rates are tracked well. In a stochastic treatment, we model expectations using a Neyman–Pearson hypothesis test (inferential expectations) and find evidence of belief conservatism and uncovered interest rate parity failure. The market environment magnifies belief conservatism, which is opposite to the standard claim that markets tend to eliminate individual choice anomalies. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|