Measurement Matters for Modeling U.S. Import Prices

36 Pages Posted: 26 Feb 2007

See all articles by Charles P. Thomas

Charles P. Thomas

Thomas & Son Analytics

Jaime Marquez

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Date Written: December 2006

Abstract

We focus on capturing the increasingly important role that emerging economies play in determining U.S. import prices. Emerging market producers differ from others in two respects: (1) their cost structure is well below that of developed-market producers, and (2) their wide profit margins induce pricing policies that seek to exhaust production capacity. We argue that these features have dampened the short-run responses of import prices to changes in the value of the dollar but that they have not altered the associated long-run response. To capture these considerations, we develop a new method to measure foreign prices and adopt a formulation that differentiates between short- and long-run responses. Our econometric work asks two questions: First, can one replicate the literature's dispersion of pass-through estimates? Second, is there any evidence of a change in the dynamic response of import prices to changes in the exchange value of the dollar? To address the first question, we estimate the parameters of our models using several alternative measures of U.S. and foreign prices, dynamic specifications, and sample periods. We find that these alternative inputs translate into a large range of parameter estimates, a finding that helps to rationalizing the existing dispersion of estimates. To address the second question, we compute the implied dynamic adjustment of import prices to a change in the value of the dollar using parameters estimated from two samples: 1974-2000 and 1974-2005. The long-run response of import prices is similar regardless of which sample is used - roughly one-half of the change in the exchange rate is passed through to import prices. However, the short-run response is quite sensitive to the sample period. Specifically, the short-run response based on data through 2005 is smaller than the short-run response based on data through 2000. We argue that one force behind the change in dynamics of the import-price process is the greater presence of producers from emerging economies and that their effect on import prices can be captured with their measure of foreign prices.

Keywords: aggregation methods, automated specification, exchange rates, pass-through, Penn World Tables

JEL Classification: F17, F41, C51, C53

Suggested Citation

Thomas, Charles P. and Marquez, Jaime, Measurement Matters for Modeling U.S. Import Prices (December 2006). FRB International Finance Discussion Paper No. 883, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=964960 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.964960

Charles P. Thomas (Contact Author)

Thomas & Son Analytics ( email )

5409 Center St
Chevy Chase, MD 20815
United States
2022075834 (Phone)

Jaime Marquez

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ( email )

20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20551
United States

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