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Heterogeneous Consumers and ConsumptionReal Exchange Rate Anomaly

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Title: Heterogeneous Consumers and ConsumptionReal Exchange Rate Anomaly


1
  • Heterogeneous Consumers and Consumption-Real
    Exchange Rate Anomaly
  • Izzet Yildiz
  • April 2009

2
Motivation
  • Theory says that there should be close relation
    between fluctuations in consumption ratios and
    bilateral exchange rates
  • Backus Smith (1993)
  • However it is rejected in the data (consumption
    real exchange rate anomaly)

3
This paper proposes
  • heterogeneous consumers with limited
    participation to asset markets by defining two
    different consumers wage earners and investors
  • Simpler mechanism than endogenous segmentation
  • No fix costs of entering to the asset markets

4
Question
  • What is the mechanism gives negative correlation
    of real exchange rates and consumption ratios
    while preserving other properties of real
    exchange rate such as volatility and persistence?

5
Data
  • Updates of Backus Smith(1993) tables (1971-1990)
  • Total private consumption Volume and price index
    are from OECD Quarterly National Accounts
    (1978QI-2006QIV), base year 2000, seasonally
    adjusted
  • Nominal exchange rates from FED website
  • Countries Australia, Canada, France,Germany,
    Japan, Sweden, United Kingdom, United States
  • According to theory points should be on the
    linear line with tangent 1/d for mean and std.
    dev. and with tangent 1 for auto correlation

6
Data
7
Data
8
Data
9
Data
10
Data
  • Additional Observations
  • 1-Data shows that there is no systematic
    correlation between exchange rate and consumption
    (consumption real exchange rate anomaly,
    CKM(2002))
  • correlation (data, US-EU)-0.35
  • correlation (theory) 1.00
  • 2-Consumption ratios are more stable than real
    exchange rates,CKM(2002)
  • Stdev of consumption/Stdev GDP0.83
  • Stdev of Real Exch. Rate/Stdev GDP4.36

11
Data
  • 3-Limited participation among the consumers
  • My goal is to differentiate consumers as
    investors and wage earners
  • I investigate the data who participates and how
    much with respect to income percentiles

12
Data
  • Participation rate of families by asset
    types, 2004 SCF survey

13
Data
Percentage of Family holdings in total value
of asset markets 2004 SCF survey
14
Literature
  • Backus Smith(1993)
  • -Endowment economy with and without
    non-traded goods
  • - point out consumption real exchange rate
    anomaly in both models
  • Chari, Kehoe, McGrattan (2002)
  • -Two country general equilibrium model
  • -Exclude non-traded goods ( explain only 2
    percent of variations in exchange rate)
  • -Monetary shocks, sticky prices, separable
    preferences in leisure
  • -real exchange rate is equal to ratio of
    marginal utilities of consumption of households
    in two countries

15
Literature
  • -exchange rate is as volatile as in data (by high
    risk aversion5) but has lower persistence (by
    price stickiness)
  • -point out persistence and consumption anomaly
  • -introduce different preferences and two asset
    market frictions to solve consumption-exchange
    rate anomaly
  • 1-nonseparable preferences
  • 2-different interest rate rules
  • 3-incomplete asset markets (uncontingent
    bonds)
  • 4-Habit persistence ( external habit)
  • Both ways couldnt solve the anomaly.
  • The main failing of our model is the
    consumption-real exchange rate anomaly

16
Literature
  • Steinsson (2008)
  • -focus on persistence and hump shaped
    dynamics of real exchange rates
  • -introduce real shocks (phillips curve
    shocks) to CKM model (labor supply, productivity,
    government spending, demand , cost-push)
  • -match the persistence of real exchange rate
    (persistence anomaly)
  • -with habit formation and phillips curve
    shocks, find lower but still positive correlation
    of real exchange rate and consumption (0.45)
  • At present there are no fully satisfactory
    solution to this problem in the literature

17
Literature
  • Alvarez, Atkeson and Kehoe(2008)
  • -Two country pure exchange economy
  • -Focus on creating time varying risk premia
    and forward premium anomaly
  • -Endogenously segmented asset markets
    household should pay randomly assigned fixed cost
    to transfer money between good and asset markets
  • Our model provides potential resolution to the
    Backus Smith (1993 ) puzzle
  • -No quantitative results and empirical
    evidence for consumption-exchange rate anomaly

18
Model Overview
19
Model-Sticky Price
  • Intermediate good prices are sticky in a
    staggered way
  • Prices are in local currency
  • Each period 1/N of the firms set prices fix for N
    periods before the realization of event st. Price
    of these firms are
  • So there is no uncertainty and in optimization
    firms in the specific cohort ( 0,1/N,
    1/N,2/N,choose prices for N periods in the
    particular period.

20
Model-Intermediate Good Firms
  • Intermediate good firms
  • -monopolistic market
  • - For simplification I assume that intermediate
    firms have fix capital stock( k1) with no
    depreciation. So I eliminate investment and
    adjustment cost from the equations as in
    homogenous factor model of Steinsson(2008)
  • -Production function is cobb-douglas, e is the
    nominal exchange rate and Q(st) is the price of
    one unit of home currency in st at time 0
    (discount factor).

21
Model-Intermediate Good Firms
  • They sell both foreign and domestic markets.
    Their production technology is
  • They choose prices of input goods for both
    markets and labor
  • Choice variables
  • They maximize profits subject to input demand
    from final good firms, production technology and
    price constraints.

22
Model-Final Good Firms
  • Final good firms solve static problem in
    competitive markets each period t
  • Their production function is
  • T gives mark up, p and T determines elasticity of
    substitution btw. YF and YH
  • They choose the allocation of domestic and
    foreign input, yH(i, st) and yF(i, st) to
    maximize the profit

23
Model-Wage Earners
  • Wage Earners
  • -Wage earners can not issue and trade bonds.
  • -They can only supply labor and consume.
  • -Their total share in population is 1-a.
  • -The budget constraint is

24
Model-Wage Earners
  • They choose consumption, labor and real money to
    maximize utility function
  • FOCs for labor is

25
Model-Investors
  • Investors
  • -their total share in population is a.
  • -consume but they dont supply labor to
    production.
  • -shareholders of intermediate firms, and
    their earnings are the profits of monopolistic
    intermediate firms.
  • -Investors have access to asset markets.
    They can hold both domestic and foreign bonds
    under no arbitrage condition
  • -For simplicity I assumed the only traded
    asset in markets is state contingent bonds and
    markets are complete

26
Model-Investors
  • Their budget constraint
  • Investor choose bonds for st1, consumption and
    real money to maximize
  • FOCs
  • Home Country Bonds

27
Results
  • No model output yet
  • Comparison with CKM(2002)
  • Real exchange rate depends on only the
    consumption of investor not aggregate consumption

28
Empirical Evidence
  • Empirical Check
  • Potential problem Investor consumptions moments
    can be similar to aggregate consumption, so
    anomaly can still exist.
  • Need top 20 income percentiles (investors)
    consumption data for two countries
  • Questions
  • Does the top 20 (investors) and low 20 (wage
    earners) income percentiles consumption data
    have different statistical properties for each
    country?
  • Are the consumption growth difference between
    countries of different percentile groups
    different?
  • If yes, is it adequate to explain the anomaly?

29
Empirical Evidence
  • First Country Italy
  • Introduction
  • Source SHIW (Survey of Household Income and
    Wealth )
  • Period Annual data is available from 1980 to
    2006, but only for 16 years.
  • Each years survey includes observation of
    households ranging from 4000 to 8000.
  • Each household has 3 individuals on average.
  • Households defined by identification codes. Since
    codes are changing in each survey, households can
    not be followed among the surveys
  • Its format and questionnaire is different before
    and after 1987.

30
Empirical Evidence
  • Results
  • Wage earners (lowest 20 percentile) and
    investors (top 20 percentile) mean consumption
    growth are different, 3.99 and 4.54.
  • Their standard deviation and autocorrelations are
    almost same.
  • Therefore in Italy different income groups has
    different level of consumption but their change
    over years has similar properties.

31
Empirical Evidence
  • Italy consumption data for investors and wage
    earners

32
Empirical Evidence
  • Second Country United States
  • Source CEX (consumer expenditure interview
    survey)
  • It is more comprehensive survey than the SHIW.
    Number of household varies from 20,000 to 40,000
    in each years surveys.
  • Each survey includes about 700,000 observations
    for 620 consumption items classified by universal
    classification mode.
  • It has two main components, interview and diary
    surveys
  • Interview survey is done every 3 months. Data is
    available in is from 1990 to 2006. In order to be
    compatible with Italy data, I looked at1993,
    1995, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006 surveys
  • I used income and detailed expenditure surveys. I
    aggregate consumption data over 620 items for
    each quarter.

33
Empirical Evidence
  • Consumption Aggregation method

34
Empirical Evidence
  • Results
  • Standard deviation and autocorrelation of less
    than 20 percentile ( wage earners) consumption is
    different than total consumption.
  • Top 20 percentile (investors) consumption data
    has higher variance than the total consumption.

35
Empirical Evidence
  • US consumption data for investors and wage earners

36
Empirical Evidence
  • Comparison of two countries data( ci-cj)
  • -Variance and autocorrelation of wage
    earner and average consumer is lower than
    investor

37
Empirical Evidence
Comparison of US-Italy consumption growth data(
ci-cj) over years
38
Data Problems
  • Italy (SHIW) and US(CEX) surveys have different
    format and questionnaire
  • Calculation of consumption and income data is
    different in the surveys
  • Size of the surveys and periods are different
  • Surveys format and reported file types are
    changing over the years. SHIW in 1987 and CEX in
    1991.

39
Conclusion
  • There is difference between wage earners and
    investor data moments. Variance of investors
    relative consumption growth between US and Italy
    is higher than both wage earners and average
    consumer
  • Second question what is the contribution of this
    difference to the consumption anomaly

40
Roadmap
  • 1-Calculating correlation of real exchange rates
    and consumption from micro surveys
  • 2-With respect to results, completing model and
    getting output by trying to match the statistical
    properties from micro survey
  • 3-Looking at other countries consumer surveys(
    emerging countries)
  • 4-If heterogeneity is not adequate to explain the
    anomaly,try alternative approaches
  • Comparing different utility forms( wealth in
    investors utility) such as Bakshi Chen (1996)
  • -Motivation Investors maximize also their
    wealth not only their consumption while giving
    investment decision.
  • Introducing country specific risk parameters
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