*Relative to other countries.
exchange rate are the opposite of those indicated in the “Response” column.
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Part 5 Financial Markets
therefore falls, the demand curve shifts to the left, and the exchange rate
declines, as in the fifth row of Table 15.2.
6. When expected export demand rises, the opposite occurs because the
exchange rate is expected to appreciate in the long run. The expected return
on dollar assets rises, the demand curve shifts to the right, and the exchange
rate rises, as in the sixth row of Table 15.2.
7. With higher expected domestic productivity, the exchange rate is expected to
appreciate in the long run, so the expected return on domestic assets rises.
The quantity demanded at each exchange rate therefore rises, the demand
curve shifts to the right, and the exchange rate rises, as in the seventh row
of Table 15.2.
C A S E
Effect of Changes in Interest Rates on the
Equilibrium Exchange Rate
Our analysis has revealed the factors that affect the value of the equilibrium exchange
rate. Now we use this analysis to take a close look at the response of the exchange
rate to changes in interest rates.
Changes in domestic interest rates i
D
are often cited as a major factor affecting
exchange rates. For example, we see headlines in the financial press like this one:
“Dollar Recovers as Interest Rates Edge Upward.” But is the view presented in this
headline always correct?
Not necessarily, because to analyze the effects of interest rate changes, we must
carefully distinguish the sources of the changes. The Fisher equation (Chapter 3)
states that a nominal interest rate such as i
D
equals the real interest rate plus
expected inflation:
. The Fisher equation thus indicates that the inter-
est rate i
D
can change for two reasons: Either the real interest rate i
r
changes or
the expected inflation rate
changes. The effect on the exchange rate is quite dif-
ferent, depending on which of these two factors is the source of the change in the
nominal interest rate.
Suppose that the domestic real interest rate increases so that the nominal inter-
est rate i
D
rises while expected inflation remains unchanged. In this case, it is rea-
sonable to assume that the expected appreciation of the dollar will be unchanged
because expected inflation is unchanged. In this case, the increase in i
D
increases the
relative expected return on dollar assets, increases the quantity of dollar assets
demanded at each level of the exchange rate, and shifts the demand curve to the
right. We end up with the situation depicted in Figure 15.4, which analyzes an
increase in i
D
, holding everything else constant. Our model of the foreign exchange
market produces the following result: When domestic real interest rates rise,
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