This paper examines the empirical relevance of the flexible price monetary model in the Indian context to determine whether US dollar-Indian rupee exchange rate movements are in line with the changes in monetary fundamentals namely relative money supply, relative interest rates and relative output. A sample period of nineteen years (August 1996 to March 2015) was considered for the study and the entire period was divided into two sub periods marked by distinct patterns of exchange rate volatility and variations in the behaviour of macro-economic fundamentals. The study examined whether there exists a long-term relationship between exchange rate and variables of the monetary model besides investigating the predictive ability of the model in determining the exchange rate in the Indian context. The Johansen Juselius test of cointegration was carried out and the variables were found to be linearly cointegrated establishing the long-run relationship between exchange rate and monetary fundamentals rate thereby confirming the suitability of the flexible price monetary model in determining Indian rupee vis-à-vis US dollar. The Granger causality test [21] was conducted to determine the direction of causality between variables and to evaluate the predictive power of the monetary model and the test results exhibited some idiosyncratic patterns among the variables across the two sub periods. For the first sub period, the Granger causality test results show that there is a one-way causality from relative output and relative money supply to exchange rate, while there is no causality from relative interest rate to exchange rates. This result is quite puzzling and calls for further investigation. As the direction of causality is changing within the sample, the study suggests that the monetary model standalone cannot be effectively used for predicting exchange rate in the Indian context. A more comprehensive model with more macro-economic variables such as trade balance and capital flows may be combined with the existing variables for effective forecasting of exchange rate in India.
In an increasingly globalised world, with the growing significance of international trade, the exchange rate has become an important variable impacting the decisions of exporters, importers, bankers, financial institutions and policymakers alike across both the developed and developing world. Since fluctuations in exchange rate have significant implications for a country’s business cycles, its trade and capital flows, timely forecasts of exchange rates have become crucial in the spheres of international finance, trade and policy making.
Over the past three decades, in the area of international finance, various theoretical models have been developed and tested to analyse exchange rate behaviour. The liberalisation and development of foreign exchange and assets markets, have led to the consideration of important variables such as capital flows, volatility in capital flows and forward premium along with central bank intervention in determining exchange rates. Furthermore, the micro level dynamics in foreign exchange markets has gained prominence due to rise in the trading volumes in these markets and the subsequent evolvement of the microstructure theory in determining exchange rates (Evans and Lyons, [
The main objective of this study is to empirically assess the long-term relationship between the US dollar-Indian rupee exchange rate and economic variables of the flexible price monetary model of exchange rate to determine whether exchange rate movements are in line with economic fundamentals. Though there is ample research on modelling exchange rate for advanced countries, studies based on emerging countries are confined to a few recent studies. The study therefore focuses on studying the validity of the flexible price monetary model during a managed float exchange rate regime to answer the following two main research questions.
1. Is there a long-term relationship between exchange rate and variables of the monetary model in the Indian context?
2. Can the flexible price monetary model be used to predict exchange rate movements in the long run?
The organisation of the study is as follows: Section 2 provides an historical overview of the exchange rate regimes in India. A review of literature is conducted in Section 3. The theoretical framework is laid out in Section 4. Section 5 enumerates the data sources and methodology of the study. The findings of the analysis are discussed in Section 6 and the final section underlines the conclusions.
In the post independence period, India’s exchange rate policy has undergone a paradigm shift from a par value system to a basket-peg and further to its current managed float exchange rate system. The Indian rupee which was linked with the pound sterling in the aftermath of the breakdown of the Bretton Woods System in 1971, began to be pegged to a basket of currencies from 1975 till the early 1990s to ensure stability of the exchange rate. Throughout the 1980s, the exchange rate was allowed to fluctuate in a wider margin and to depreciate modestly. However, in the wake of the balance of payment crisis in 1991 and the increasing current account deficit, the Indian economy initiated a number of economic measures to instill confidence in the investors and to improve domestic competitiveness. To offset the substantial draw down in the foreign exchange reserves, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had to devalue the Rupee in two stages on July 1 and July 3, 1991 which led to the beginning of a new dual exchange rate regime known as Liberalized Exchange Rate Management System (LERMS). The new regime was implemented from March 1992. Subsequently, the dual exchange rate system LERMS was replaced by a unified exchange rate ushering in an era of market determined exchange rate since March 1993. Reserve Bank of India continued to intervene in the foreign excess market to address instances of volatility making exchange rate regime to be a managed floating exchange rate system. However, going forward, on a more cautious note it may be noted that with India getting increasingly integrated with the world economy and advancing towards full capital account convertibility, the management of volatility is likely to be challenging requiring strategic liquidity management to mitigate the associated risks.
The switch to floating exchange rates in the 1970s resulted in a wealth of theoretical literature to explain the high volatility in exchange rates. Prior to the 1970s, in an era of fixed exchange rate regimes, many countries adopted the purchasing power parity model (PPP) to study exchange rate behavior. However, in the early 1970s, with the collapse of the fixed exchange rate systems, monetary models of exchange rate determination became popular in modelling exchange rate behavior especially with many of the industrialized economies adopting the floating exchange rate regimes. This section selectively examines some of the most influential structural models that have been developed to model exchange rate behavior.
In the monetary model, it is the money supply in both domestic and foreign countries as opposed to money demand function that determines the exchange rate. Monetary models are the offsprings of the Mundell-Fleming type of models. Several versions of the monetary model have been put forth and prominent among them are Frenkel’s [
Over the last four decades, the empirical performance of the monetary models has shown mixed results. The academic interest in monetary models began to fade with the seminal work of Meese and Rogoff [
Abhyankara, Sarno and Valenteb [
In the emerging economy context, many researchers have extended the monetary model of exchange rate determination to these economies having a managed floating exchange rate system. By using Johansen Juselius Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) techniques, Alao, Oziegbe, Ibidapo, & Sharimakin [
Having conducted the review of literature, we observed that while there exists substantial research on modelling exchange rate for advanced countries, studies based on emerging economies especially India are extremely few. In the Indian context, the study conducted by Dua and Ranjan [
This section details the flexible price monetary model (Frenkel [
The money market equilibrium in the home country is given as:
after taking log both the sides, we get,
We can derive money market equilibrium in foreign country as
All the variables are in natural log.
where e = price of foreign currency in domestic currency
m = money supply
m* = money supply in foreign country
y = real output
y* = real output in foreign country
i = nominal interest rate.
t represents time, η and φ are positive constants of home country and η* and φ* are parameters of foreign country.
The flexible price monetary model was developed under the assumption of one good and perfect price flexibility. It implies Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) holds continuously. The goods market equilibrium thus is given as:
The next assumption of the model describes asset market condition. The model assumes perfect mobility of capital, i.e., the domestic and the foreign bonds are perfect substitute. It implies uncovered interest rate parity (UCIRP) which incorporates the expectation in the asset market due to uncertainty. It is given as:
Money supply in the economy determines the price level in the home country and hence exchange rate is determined by the relative money supplies in two countries. We can further derive the model as follows:
Subtract Equation (5) from (4), we get:
Since monetary model assumes that Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) holds, we can write the above equation as
It is assumes that interest rate and income elasticities are identical hence
Equation (10) is the Flexible Price Monetary Model (FPM) which indicates that; if domestic money supply increases relative to foreign money supply, value of St will increase indicating depreciation of domestic currency against foreign currency. Conversely, a boost in domestic real income, ceteris paribus, creates an excess demand for the domestic money stock. In an attempt to increase their real money balances, domestic residents reduce expenditure and prices fall until money market equilibrium is achieved. Via PPP, the fall in domestic prices (with foreign prices constant) implies an appreciation of the domestic currency in terms of the foreign currency (a rise in the value of domestic currency in terms of foreign currency) (Neely and Sarno [
The study is based on secondary data for India and the United States. Monthly data from August 1996 to March 2015 is being considered for the study. Though India adopted managed floating exchange rate regime since March 1993, our sample period starts from August 1996 due to the availability of the data for all the series. Index of Industrial Production (IIP) has been taken as proxy to output since estimates of GDP are available only quarterly. The data for exchange rate, money supply and interest rates (91-days Treasury Bill rate) for India is collected from the database of Indian economy by Reserve Bank of India. The source of IIP for India is Ministry of Statistics and Program Implementation. The data for US money supply, IIP, and interest rate (3-month Treasury Bill rate) is collected from Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, US (
The data in the model conforms to time series data. To establish the model, it is important to test the variables for stationarity. One of the assumptions of classical linear regression model is that the variables under study must be stationary. If they are non stationary, regression model becomes “spurious” despite high value of R-squared. The following section analyzes the long-run relationship among money, output interest rates and the exchange rate for the whole sample (August 1996 to March 2015).
The full period starts from August 1996 till March 2015. The Indian rupee fluctuated in a wide range against US dollar during this period. The minimum was Rs. 35.7/$ and maximum of Rs. 66.6/$ with the standard deviation of 6.6. The high value of standard deviation indicates high volatility especially after the crisis (2009) (see
The following diagnostic tests were undertaken to test the stationarity of the data.
1. Augmented Dickey Fuller (ADF) test,
2. Phillips and Perron (PP) test, and
3. Kwiatkowski, Phillips, Schmidt, and Shin (KPSS) test.
Variables | Data Source for India | Data Source for the US |
---|---|---|
Exchange rate INR/USD | Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, US | |
Money supply | Database on Indian Economy by RBI | Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, US |
91-days treasury bill rate | Database on Indian Economy by RBI | Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, US |
IIP | Ministry of Statistics and Program Implementation | Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, US |
Period | Mean | Standard Deviation | Minimum | Maximum |
---|---|---|---|---|
August 1996 to March 2015 | 47.0 | 6.6 | 35.7 | 66.6 |
August 1996 to Feb 2008 | 43.7 | 3.6 | 35.7 | 49.0 |
March 2008 to March 2015 | 52.4 | 6.8 | 42.5 | 66.6 |
To test whether the variables under consideration were stationary, three diagnostic tests were administered. They are ADF test (Dickey & Fuller, [
All the variables were found to be non-stationary at levels but stationary at first difference. Thus we can infer that the variables under study are integrated of order one I (1).
To test for cointegration, Johansen Juselius [
The result confirms that there exists cointegration and hence we can infer that the series have common stochastic trend. This implies that in the long-run, monetary model explains the exchange rate behavior regardless of the direction of causality (Garces-Diaz [
The current study divides the period of study into two sub-periods. The initial period starts from August 1996 till Feb 2008 before the global crisis during which the Indian rupee was quite stable against US dollar. The Indian rupee fluctuated between Rs. 35.7/$ and Rs. 49.0/$ against US dollar for the period before crisis. The standard deviation during this period was 3.6 indicating stable exchange rates (refer
The second period commences with the onset of the global crisis. This period witnessed high volatility of exchange rate. Indian rupee fluctuated between Rs. 42.5/$ and Rs. 66.6/$. The standard deviation was 6.8 indicating high volatility. The results of Granger causality test for this period is reported in
Having established the existence of cointegration, causality in the Granger (temporal) sense must exist in at least one direction [
ADF | PP | KPSS | Decision | |
---|---|---|---|---|
e | I(1) | I(1) | I(1) | I(1) |
(m-m*) | I(1) | I(1) | I(1) | I(1) |
(y-y*) | I(0) | I(1) | I(1) | I(1) |
(i-i*) | I(1) | I(1) | I(1) | I(1) |
Hypothesized | Trace | 0.05 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. of CE(s) | Eigen-Value | Statistic | Critical Value | Prob.** |
None * | 0.125659 | 65.98565 | 47.85613 | 0.0004 |
At most 1 * | 0.10747 | 35.90587 | 29.79707 | 0.0087 |
At most 2 | 0.034599 | 10.4381 | 15.49471 | 0.2485 |
At most 3 | 0.011323 | 2.550755 | 3.841466 | 0.1102 |
Hypothesized | Max-Eigen | 0.05 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. of CE(s) | Eigen-value | Statistic | Critical Value | Prob.** |
None * | 0.125659 | 30.07978 | 27.58434 | 0.0234 |
At most 1 * | 0.10747 | 25.46777 | 21.13162 | 0.0115 |
At most 2 | 0.034599 | 7.887343 | 14.2646 | 0.3902 |
At most 3 | 0.011323 | 2.550755 | 3.841466 | 0.1102 |
Null Hypothesis | No. of Lags | F Statistic | P-value | Decision |
---|---|---|---|---|
e does not Granger caused by (y-y*) | 2 | 5.01759 | 0.0079 | Reject Ho |
e does not Granger caused by (m-m*) | 2 | 2.40288 | 0.0943 | Reject Ho |
e does not Granger caused by (i-i*) | 2 | 0.01946 | 0.9807 | Do not Reject |
Null Hypothesis | No. of Lags | F Statistic | P-value | Decision |
---|---|---|---|---|
e does not Granger caused by (y-*) | 2 | 0.031 | 0.9695 | Do not Reject |
e does not Granger caused by (m-m*) | 2 | 0.1361 | 0.8729 | Do not Reject |
e does not Granger caused by (i-i*) | 2 | 3.6947 | 0.0292 | Reject Ho |
The Granger causality test results shows that there is one-way causality from relative output and relative money supply to exchange rate, however there is no causality from relative interest rate to exchange rates. While relative money supply and relative output conforms to the theory, relative interest rates provide contrary results. This result is quite puzzling and calls for further investigation. The plausible reason can be associated with the sample period selected for this study. To maintain economic growth at sustainable level, Federal Reserve of US adopted steady decline in interest rates. Federal Fund rates were declined from 6.5% in Jan 2001 to 1% by June 2003. This period was a low interest rate period in the US. The decline in foreign interest rates usually leads to the depreciation of the foreign currency and appreciation of the domestic currency. Decline in the U.S. interest rates did not prove detrimental for Indian rupee as the nominal exchange rate (Indian rupee) was adjusted by virtue of the intervention of the Reserve Bank of India.
The Granger Causality test for the second period revealed a switch in direction of causality among the variables when compared to the initial sub period. During the second sub period there was one-way causality from relative interest rates to exchange rate, however relative money supply and relative output did not Granger cause the exchange rate. It is suggested that the mixed results could be an outcome of the financial crisis and the subsequent recovery when both the central banks resorted to an expansionary monetary policy resulting in the breakdown of relationship among the macroeconomic fundamentals.
The results indicate meaningful long-run relationship between exchange rate and monetary model variables for Indian Rupee against the US dollar. The switch in the direction of causality across the sub periods inferred that the predictive ability of monetary model in the long run is weak.
In this paper, the empirical relevance of the flexible price monetary model has been studied for India, to determine whether US dollar-Indian rupee exchange rate movements are in line with the changes in monetary fundamentals. Flexible price monetary variables namely relative money supply, relative interest rates and relative output were considered in the study. A sample period of nineteen years (August 1996 to March 2015) was considered for the study and the entire period was divided into two sub periods marked by distinct patterns of exchange rate volatility and variations in the behavior of macro-economic fundamentals. The initial period (August 1996 to February 2008) represents the post-reforms period in India and exchange rate was quite stable while during the second sub-period, exchange rate turned out to be very volatile owing to the global economic crisis resulting in the breakdown of the relationship among the macroeconomic fundamentals. The study therefore examined, first, whether there exists a long-term relationship between exchange rate and variables of the monetary model. Second, it investigates the predictive ability of the monetary model in determining the exchange rate in the Indian context.
The cointegration analysis was carried out using the Johansen Juselius test of cointegration and the variables were found to be linearly cointegrated establishing the long-run relationship between exchange rate and monetary fundamentals namely relative money supply, relative output and relative interest rate thereby confirming the suitability of the flexible price monetary model in determining Indian rupee vis-à-vis US dollar. Granger causality test was conducted to determine the direction of causality between variables and to evaluate the predictive power of the monetary model. Interestingly, the test exhibited some idiosyncratic patterns among the variables across the two sub-periods. For the first sub-period, the Granger causality test results show that there is a one- way causality from relative output and relative money supply to exchange rate, while there is no causality from relative interest rate to exchange rates. The Granger causality test for the second period revealed a switch in direction of causality among the variables when compared to the initial sub-period. During the second sub-period there was one-way causality from interest rates to exchange rate; however relative money supply and relative output did not cause the exchange rate. It is suggested that the mixed results could be an outcome of the financial crisis and the subsequent recovery when both the central banks resorted to an expansionary monetary policy resulting in the breakdown of relationship among the macroeconomic fundamentals.
As the direction of causality is changing within the sample, it may be concluded that the monetary model standalone cannot be effectively used for predicting exchange rate in the Indian context. A more comprehensive model with more macro economic variables such as trade balance and capital flows may be combined with the existing variables of the current study. The microstructure model and intervention by the central bank may also be considered for effective forecasting of exchange rate in India.
Vaishali Padake,Bhargavi Karamcheti,T. Geetha, (2016) Does Existence of Long-Run Relationship Ensure Predictability of Exchange Rate? Empirical Analysis of Indian Rupee Vis-à-Vis US Dollar under Monetary Model Framework. Theoretical Economics Letters,06,561-569. doi: 10.4236/tel.2016.63062