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Dominant Currency Paradigm

Gita Gopinath, Emine Boz, Camila Casas, Federico J. Díez, Pierre‐Olivier Gourinchas, Mikkel Plagborg‐MøllerEconomics宏观经济学FT50
American Economic Review2020-02-28Harvard University; International Monetary Fund; Banco de la República Colombia; University of California, Berkeley; Princeton UniversityDOI
Citations547
Influential37
References70
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We propose a “dominant currency paradigm” with three key features: dominant currency pricing, pricing complementarities, and imported inputs in production. We test this paradigm using a new dataset of bilateral price and volume indices for more than 2,500 country pairs that covers 91 percent of world trade, as well as detailed firm-product-country data for Colombian exports and imports. In strong support of the paradigm we find that (i) noncommodities terms-of-trade are uncorrelated with exchange rates; (ii) the dollar exchange rate quantitatively dominates the bilateral exchange rate in price pass-through and trade elasticity regressions, and this effect is increasing in the share of imports invoiced in dollars; (iii) US import volumes are significantly less sensitive to bilateral exchange rates, compared to other countries’ imports; (iv) a 1 percent US dollar appreciation against all other currencies predicts a 0.6 percent decline within a year in the volume of total trade between countries in the rest of the world, controlling for the global business cycle. We characterize the transmission of, and spillovers from, monetary policy shocks in this environment. (JEL E52, F14, F31, F44)

EconomicsCurrencyLiberian dollarExchange rateMonetary economicsUs dollarInternational economicsFinanceGlobal trade and economicsMonetary Policy and Economic ImpactGlobal Financial Crisis and Policies