Université de Lausanne
Faculté des
HEC
Département d'économétrie
et d'économie politique
Cahier de recherches économiques du DEEP No. 09.07
Philippe Bacchetta
Eric van Wincoop
On the Unstable Relationship between Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Fundamentals
May 2009
Abstract
It is well known from anecdotal, survey and econometric evidence that the relationship
between the exchange rate and macro fundamentals is highly unstable. This could
be explained when structural parameters are known and very volatile, neither
of which seems plausible. Instead we argue that large and frequent variations
in the relationship between the exchange rate and macro fundamentals naturally
develop when structural parameters in the economy are unknown and change very
slowly. We show that the reduced form relationship between exchange rates and
fundamentals is driven not by the structural parameters themselves, but rather
by expectations of these parameters. These expectations can be highly unstable
as a result of perfectly rational "scapegoat" effects. This happens
when parameters can potentially change much more in the long run than the short
run. This generates substantial uncertainty about the level of parameters, even
though monthly or annual changes are small. This mechanism can also be relevant
in other contexts of forward looking variables and could explain the widespread
evidence of parameter instability found in macroeconomic and financial data.
Finally, we show that parameter instability has remarkably little effect on
the volatility of exchange rates, the in-sample explanatory power of macro fundamentals
and the ability to forecast out of sample.
Keywords: exchange rate; time-varying coefficients
JEL classification: F31; F37; F41