At a level of individual goods, heterogeneity of marginal transaction costs, proxied by price-to-weight ratios and stowage factors, explains a large part of the variation in thresholds of no-adjustment and conditional half-lives of law of one price deviations. Prices of heavier more voluminous) goods deviate further before becoming mean-reverting. Moreover, after becoming mean-reverting, prices of heavier goods converge more slowly. Together with measures of pricing power, market size, distance and exchange rate volatility, these factors explain up to 43% of variation in no-adjustment threshold estimates across 52 goods in US-Canada post Bretton Woods monthly CPI data and are robust in a broader 5-country dataset. They open two avenues for...
We propose that analysis of purchasing power parity (PPP) and the law of one price (LOOP) should exp...
Volatile and persistent real exchange rates are observed not only in aggregate series but also in th...
We suggest it may be "too easy" to attribute real exchange rate movements to law of one price deviat...
At a level of individual goods, heterogeneity of marginal transaction costs, proxied by price-to-wei...
Modelling of the physical characteristics of goods and geography can explain both the puzzling persi...
Using self-exciting threshold autoregressive models, we explore the validity of the law of one price...
This paper analyzes the role of goods market frictions in accounting for the large and volatile devi...
The purchasing power parity puzzle is among the central issues of international macroeconomics. In m...
Modelling of the physical characteristics of goods and geography can explain both the puzzling persi...
In this Paper we test empirically the validity of the law of one price using data for five major bil...
In this paper we test empirically the validity of the law of one price using data for five major bil...
Using Self-Exciting Threshold Autoregressive Models (SETAR), this paper explores the validity of the...
We study the dynamics of good-by-good real exchange rates using a micro-panel of 270 goods prices dr...
The general purpose of this paper is to analyze empirically sectoral price adjustment in the exchang...
We use a novel data set of online prices of identical goods sold by four large global retailers in d...
We propose that analysis of purchasing power parity (PPP) and the law of one price (LOOP) should exp...
Volatile and persistent real exchange rates are observed not only in aggregate series but also in th...
We suggest it may be "too easy" to attribute real exchange rate movements to law of one price deviat...
At a level of individual goods, heterogeneity of marginal transaction costs, proxied by price-to-wei...
Modelling of the physical characteristics of goods and geography can explain both the puzzling persi...
Using self-exciting threshold autoregressive models, we explore the validity of the law of one price...
This paper analyzes the role of goods market frictions in accounting for the large and volatile devi...
The purchasing power parity puzzle is among the central issues of international macroeconomics. In m...
Modelling of the physical characteristics of goods and geography can explain both the puzzling persi...
In this Paper we test empirically the validity of the law of one price using data for five major bil...
In this paper we test empirically the validity of the law of one price using data for five major bil...
Using Self-Exciting Threshold Autoregressive Models (SETAR), this paper explores the validity of the...
We study the dynamics of good-by-good real exchange rates using a micro-panel of 270 goods prices dr...
The general purpose of this paper is to analyze empirically sectoral price adjustment in the exchang...
We use a novel data set of online prices of identical goods sold by four large global retailers in d...
We propose that analysis of purchasing power parity (PPP) and the law of one price (LOOP) should exp...
Volatile and persistent real exchange rates are observed not only in aggregate series but also in th...
We suggest it may be "too easy" to attribute real exchange rate movements to law of one price deviat...