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Purchasing Power Parity Research Paper

International Finance Purchasing Power Parity

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP), also known as the law of one price, operates under the assumption that product prices in one country translate into an equal price in another country. The price similarity assumption is used to gauge currency exchange rate pressures. If the law of one price is assumed, then the premise establishes that the relational value of currencies must converge to equilibrium. The equation expresses that any inequality creates an arbitrage opportunity until equilibrium returns.

At best, the PPP is a rudimentary tool for long-term pricing pressures, however the simplicity of the equation is part of its shortcoming. Annual price level comparisons by The Economist illustrate that even the most uniform of products, for example the McDonald's Big Mac, provides little proof for the reliability of the PPP. Comparing the 2010 to 2012 Big Mac Index illustrates that none of the countries compared demonstrated price parity to the U.S. average cost, or consistent convergence towards parity.[footnoteRef:1][footnoteRef:2][footnoteRef:3] The St. Louis Federal Reserves notes that, "Clearly, absolute PPP does not hold strictly for the currencies of countries reported," and...

If there are no limits to the mobility of capital, then theoretically arbitrage opportunities move into equilibrium through interest rate movements. [5: (Abdulnasser, 2009)]
Evidence of the International Fisher Hypothesis is noted as reliable and that, "markets may still be considered as efficient," regardless of some disparities attributable to "transaction costs" and "exchange rate risk premium."[footnoteRef:6] [6: (Abdulnasser, 2009)]

Interest Rate Parity

Interest rate parity is the view that across countries the…

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Works Cited

Abdulnasser, H.J. (2009). The International Fisher Effect: theory and application. Investment Management and Financial Innovations, 6 (1), 117-121.

Chinn, M., & Frankel, J. (2005, Jan. 4). The Euro Area and World Interest Rates. Retrieved Aug. 23, 2012, from University of Wisconsin Web Site: http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/~mchinn/intratepap7.pdf

Pakko, M.R., & Pollard, P.S. (2003). Burgernomics: A Big MacTM Guide to Purchasing Power Parity . Retrieved Aug. 22, 2012, from The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.: http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/03/11/pakko.pdf

The Economist. (2010, Oct. 10). The Big Mac index An indigestible problem. Retrieved Aug. 23, 2012, from The Economist Web site: http://www.economist.com/node/17257797
The Economist. (2011, July 28). The Big Mac index Currency comparisons, to go. Retrieved Aug. 23, 2012, from The Economist Web site: http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/07/big-mac-index
The Economist. (2012, Jan. 12). The Big Mac index: Burgernomics shows Switzerland has the most overvalued currency. Retrieved Aug. 23, 2012, from The Economist Web site: http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2012/01/daily-chart-3
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