The purchasing power parity puzzle

K Rogoff - Journal of Economic literature, 1996 - JSTOR
Journal of Economic literature, 1996JSTOR
FIRST ARTICULATED by scholars of the ISalamanca school in sixteenth century Spain, 1
purchasing power parity (PPP) is the disarmingly simple empirical proposition that, once
converted to a common currency, national price levels should be equal. The basic idea is
that if goods market arbitrage enforces broad parity in prices across a sufficient range of
individual goods (the law of one price), then there should also be a high correlation in
aggregate price levels. While few empirically literate economists take PPP seriously as a …
FIRST ARTICULATED by scholars of the ISalamanca school in sixteenth century Spain, 1 purchasing power parity (PPP) is the disarmingly simple empirical proposition that, once converted to a common currency, national price levels should be equal. The basic idea is that if goods market arbitrage enforces broad parity in prices across a sufficient range of individual goods (the law of one price), then there should also be a high correlation in aggregate price levels. While few empirically literate economists take PPP seriously as a short-term proposition, most instinctively believe in some variant of purchasing power parity as an anchor for long-run real exchange rates. Warm, fuzzy feelings about PPP are not, of course, a substitute for hard evidence.
There is today an enormous and evergrowing empirical literature on PPP, one that has arrived at a surprising degree of consensus on a couple of basic facts. First, at long last, a number of recent studies have weighed in with fairly per-suasive evidence that real exchange rates
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