Discussion paper

DP2360 Noisy Financial Signals and Persistent Effects of Nominal Shocks in Open Economies

Floating exchange rates display substantial short-run volatility causing a nontrivial information problem in disentangling temporary from permanent changes. Although agents observe current market signals they are imperfectly informed about the future, but they accumulate information and learn over time. We analyze how this basic information problem in the presence of one-period nominal contracts affects the dynamic adjustment process to nominal shocks. Specifically we use a general equilibrium two-country model with specialized production and one-period nominal contracts and consider the propagation of nominal shocks. Informational problems are shown to have important qualitative and potentially strong quantitative importance for the propagation of nominal shocks.

£6.00
Citation

Andersen, T and N Beier (2000), ‘DP2360 Noisy Financial Signals and Persistent Effects of Nominal Shocks in Open Economies‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 2360. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp2360