This paper tests if the efficient market version of Purchasing Power Parity (EMPPP) holds for the Mexican case for the 1970-2002 period in an environment of changing exchange rate regimes.Two regression analyses which extend PPP to a dynamic intertemporal model, based on market efficiency, are used, and in addition two unit root tests are applied. In general, the obtained empirical evidence does not support the EMPPP.Results suggest an inefficient market resulting from weak exchange rate policies and weak adoptions of several exchange rate regimes without proper inflation targeting and the application of strong and disciplined macroeconomic policies and structural changes
The purpose of this paper is to test the hypothesis of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) for al...
We investigate the stationarity of real exchange rates using a panel of asian and south and latin am...
This paper investigates long-run Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) between the US and Mexico. To examine...
In efficient markets current prices reflect all available information. Past prices do not contain an...
Many empirical studies have suggested that purchasing power parity (PPP) does not hold in the short ...
This paper analyzes whether the real exchange-rate of the Mexican peso/US dollar revert to a long-ru...
Abstract A new approach to cointegration developed by Enders et al. (Cointegration tests using instr...
This paper tests for long-run purchasing power (PPP) among a sample of six Latin American economies....
The hypothesis that national price levels should be equal when expressed in a common currency has be...
The purpose of this paper is to test the hypothesis of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) for al...
Purchasing power parity has been the subject of many empirical studies. Much of this work has focuse...
We use a previously unexploited data set to calculate the real exchange rate with respect to the U.S...
Using the U.S. as benchmark country, Korean data from 1970:1 to 2000:4 and Mexican data from 1983:1 ...
The purpose of the study is to empirically determine the relevance of PPP theory under the tradition...
Abstract: In this paper we test the purchasing power parity principle (PPP) with a sample of 17 Lati...
The purpose of this paper is to test the hypothesis of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) for al...
We investigate the stationarity of real exchange rates using a panel of asian and south and latin am...
This paper investigates long-run Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) between the US and Mexico. To examine...
In efficient markets current prices reflect all available information. Past prices do not contain an...
Many empirical studies have suggested that purchasing power parity (PPP) does not hold in the short ...
This paper analyzes whether the real exchange-rate of the Mexican peso/US dollar revert to a long-ru...
Abstract A new approach to cointegration developed by Enders et al. (Cointegration tests using instr...
This paper tests for long-run purchasing power (PPP) among a sample of six Latin American economies....
The hypothesis that national price levels should be equal when expressed in a common currency has be...
The purpose of this paper is to test the hypothesis of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) for al...
Purchasing power parity has been the subject of many empirical studies. Much of this work has focuse...
We use a previously unexploited data set to calculate the real exchange rate with respect to the U.S...
Using the U.S. as benchmark country, Korean data from 1970:1 to 2000:4 and Mexican data from 1983:1 ...
The purpose of the study is to empirically determine the relevance of PPP theory under the tradition...
Abstract: In this paper we test the purchasing power parity principle (PPP) with a sample of 17 Lati...
The purpose of this paper is to test the hypothesis of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) for al...
We investigate the stationarity of real exchange rates using a panel of asian and south and latin am...
This paper investigates long-run Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) between the US and Mexico. To examine...