Asset prices, exchange rates and the current account |
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Authors: | Marcel Fratzscher Lucio Sarno |
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Affiliation: | a European Central Bank, Germany b Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, USA c Finance Faculty, Cass Business School and CEPR, City University London, 106 Bunhill Row, London EC1Y 8TZ, UK |
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Abstract: | This paper analyses the role of asset prices in comparison to other factors, in particular exchange rates, as a driver of the US trade balance. It employs a Bayesian structural VAR model that requires imposing only a minimum of economically meaningful sign restrictions. We find that equity market shocks and housing price shocks have been major determinants of the US current account in the past, accounting for up to 30% of the movements of the US trade balance at a horizon of 20 quarters. By contrast, shocks to the real exchange rate have been less relevant, explaining about 9% and exerting a more temporary effect on the US trade balance. Our findings suggest that large exchange rate movements may not necessarily be the key element of an adjustment of today's large current account imbalances, and that in particular relative global asset price changes could be a potent source of adjustment. |
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Keywords: | Current account Global imbalances Exchange rates Bayesian VAR |
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