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Exchange Rate and Current Account Dynamics: the Role of Asset Market Structure, Long-Run Risk and Risk Appetite

Robert Kollmann ()

No 1397, 2015 Meeting Papers from Society for Economic Dynamics

Abstract: Standard macro models cannot explain why real exchange rates are volatile and disconnected from macro aggregates. Recent research argues that models with persistent growth rate shocks and recursive preferences can solve that puzzle (e.g., Colacito and Croce, 2013). I show that this result is highly sensitive to the structure of financial markets. When just a bond is traded internationally, then long-run risk generates insufficient exchange rate volatility. A long-run risk model with recursive-preferences can generate realistic exchange rate volatility, if all agents efficiently share their consumption risk by trading in complete financial markets; however, this entails massive international wealth transfers, and excessive swings in net foreign asset positions. By contrast, a long-run risk, recursive-preferences model in which only a fraction of households trades in complete markets, while the remaining households lead hand-to-mouth lives, can generate realistic exchange rate and external balance volatility. In that framework, a rise in the volatility of a country's endowment or in the risk appetite of local investors is predicted to deteriorate the country's trade balance, and to appreciate its real exchange rate. A rise in global volatility and risk aversion improves a country's current account if that country has lower steady state risk aversion than the rest of the world. These predictions seem consistent with the fact that fluctuations in the VIX are positively correlated with the US current account.

Date: 2015
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge and nep-opm
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