National Price Levels and the Prices of Tradables and Nontradables
25 Pages Posted: 23 Aug 2000 Last revised: 8 Dec 2022
Date Written: March 1988
Abstract
This paper examines changes in national price levels and prices of tradables and nontradables and relates them to changes in variables found earlier to be associated with price level differences among countries. Across countries, national price levels increase systematically with the level of a country's per capita income, and the ratios of tradables to nontradables prices decrease. Over time, increases in per capita income are generally associated with increases in price levels in the industrial countries, although the opposite relationship tended to prevail among developing countries. Increases in income are associated with declines in the ratio of tradables to nontradables price levels more consistently than with the increases in general price levels. Increases in the exchange value of a currency are also associated with declines in the price levels for tradablesrelative to nontradables. Countries with price levels that were high or low relative to those predicted by the structural equations tended to move toward those predicted levels.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
International Evidence on Tradables and Nontradables Inflation
-
By Matthew B. Canzoneri, Robert E. Cumby, ...
-
International Evidence on Tradables and Nontradable Inflation
-
Exchange Rates and Economic Fundamentals: A Methodological Comparison of Beers and Feers
By Peter B. Clark and Ronald Macdonald
-
Real Exchange Rates in the Developing Countries: Concepts and Measure- Ment
-
The EMS, the Emu, and the Transition to a Common Currency
By Kenneth Froot and Kenneth Rogoff
-
Real Exchange Rates and Productivity Growth in the United States and Japan
-
Asset Markets, Exchange Rates and the Balance of Payments
By Jacob A. Frenkel and Michael L. Mussa
-
By Enrique Alberola, Humberto Lopez, ...
-
Long-Run Exchange Rate Modeling: A Survey of the Recent Evidence