This study revisits the Meese-Rogoff puzzle by estimating the traditional monetary models of exchange rate determination in state-space form and comparing the accuracy of these forecasts against the naïve random walk model using a wide range of conventional and alternative measures of forecasting accuracy. The results demonstrate that incorporating stochastic movements in the parameters of exchange rate models does not enable the Meese-Rogoff puzzle to be overturned. However, estimating these models in state-space form substantially improves forecasting accuracy to the extent that the model and random walk produce an equivalent magnitude of error. Furthermore, the results prove that the Meese-Rogoff puzzle can be overturned if the forecasts...
The literature on the Meese-Rogoff puzzle deals with attempts to resolve the puzzle and overturn the...
It is demonstrated that the forecasting power of the flexible price monetary model of exchange rates...
Meese and Rogoff [1983] show that macroeconomic models “of the Seventies ” fail to outperform the ra...
Several explanations have been put forward for the Meese–Rogoff puzzle that exchange rate models can...
For the past 30 years international monetary economists have believed that exchange rate models cann...
The Messe-Rogoff puzzle has been a debatable topic since 1983 when Richard Meese and Kenneth Rogoff ...
The Messe-Rogoff puzzle has been a debatable topic since 1983 when Richard Meese and Kenneth Rogoff ...
Structural breaks have been suggested by several economists as a possible explanation for the Meese-...
This paper examines the Messe and Rogoff claim of the superiority of random-walk model in the determ...
Structural breaks have been suggested by several economists as a possible explanation for the Meese–...
Some economists suggest that the failure of exchange-rate models to outperform the random walk in ex...
The empirical literature on nominal exchange rates shows that the current exchange rate is often a b...
While many explanations have been put forward for the failure of exchange rate models to outperform ...
It is demonstrated that the monetary model of exchange rates is better than the random walk in out-o...
This paper compares the true, ex-ante forecasting performance of a micro-based model against both a ...
The literature on the Meese-Rogoff puzzle deals with attempts to resolve the puzzle and overturn the...
It is demonstrated that the forecasting power of the flexible price monetary model of exchange rates...
Meese and Rogoff [1983] show that macroeconomic models “of the Seventies ” fail to outperform the ra...
Several explanations have been put forward for the Meese–Rogoff puzzle that exchange rate models can...
For the past 30 years international monetary economists have believed that exchange rate models cann...
The Messe-Rogoff puzzle has been a debatable topic since 1983 when Richard Meese and Kenneth Rogoff ...
The Messe-Rogoff puzzle has been a debatable topic since 1983 when Richard Meese and Kenneth Rogoff ...
Structural breaks have been suggested by several economists as a possible explanation for the Meese-...
This paper examines the Messe and Rogoff claim of the superiority of random-walk model in the determ...
Structural breaks have been suggested by several economists as a possible explanation for the Meese–...
Some economists suggest that the failure of exchange-rate models to outperform the random walk in ex...
The empirical literature on nominal exchange rates shows that the current exchange rate is often a b...
While many explanations have been put forward for the failure of exchange rate models to outperform ...
It is demonstrated that the monetary model of exchange rates is better than the random walk in out-o...
This paper compares the true, ex-ante forecasting performance of a micro-based model against both a ...
The literature on the Meese-Rogoff puzzle deals with attempts to resolve the puzzle and overturn the...
It is demonstrated that the forecasting power of the flexible price monetary model of exchange rates...
Meese and Rogoff [1983] show that macroeconomic models “of the Seventies ” fail to outperform the ra...