All errors are mine. The views expressed here are entirely my own and not official statements of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, the Federal Reserve, or the National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer-reviewed or been subject to the review by the NBER Board of Directors that accompanies official NBER publications.
This publication primarily presents economic research ai med at improving policymaking by the Federal Reserve System and other governmental authorities.
Data on international relative prices from industrialized countries show large and systematic deviations from relative purchasing power parity. We embed a model of imperfect competition and variable markups in some of the recently developed quantitative models of international trade to examine whether such models can reproduce the main features of the fluctuations in international relative prices. We find that when our model is parameterized to match salient features of the data on international trade and market structure in the US, it can reproduce deviations from relative purchasing power parity similar to those observed in the data because firms choose to price-to-market. We then examine how pricing-to-market depends on the presence of international trade costs and various features of market structure. * We thank George Alessandria, V.V. Chari, Doireann Fitzgerald, Mark Gertler, Jonathan Heathcote, Sam Kortum, Marc Melitz, John Rogers, and three anonymous referees for very useful comments and suggestions.† UCLA, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, and NBER. ‡ UCLA and NBER.
International relative prices across industrialized countries show large and systematic deviations from relative purchasing power parity. We embed a model of imperfect competition and variable markups in a quantitative model of international trade. We find that when our model is parameterized to match salient features of the data on international trade and market structure in the US, it can reproduce deviations from relative purchasing power parity similar to those observed in the data because firms choose to price-to-market. We then examine how pricing-to-market depends on the presence of international trade costs and various features of market structure.
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