A) Domestic industry becomes more competitive narrowing the trade balance.
B) The cost of imports increases widening the trade balance. (Explanation: In the short run, if a country’s currency depreciates in real terms, the cost of imports increases causing a widening in the trade balance (exports – imports) and an increase in domestic inflation.
Currency depreciation tends to reduce economic activity in the short run)
C) The cost of imports decreases narrowing the trade balance
A) Both will decrease.
B) Only one will increase.
C) Both will increase (Explanation: Under the traditional model, a decline in the value of a country’s currency increases national competitiveness in the long run and increases domestic inflation in the short run. This will occur due to an increase in exports for the country whose currency is less valuable. In the short run the cost of imports increases for the country with the decline in currency value)
A) Changes in the nominal rate, not the real rate, cause appreciation.
B) The value of the currency will rise. (Explanation: If the monetary authority (e.g., the central bank) increases real rates, capital will flow into the country. The increased demand for the nation’s currency will cause the currency to appreciate)
C) The value of the currency will fall
A) is negatively correlated with equity returns.
B) is positively correlated with equity returns. (Explanation: In the money demand model, an increase in real economic activity leads to an increase in the demand for the domestic currency. The increased currency demand causes the value of the currency to appreciate. Because stock prices are highly correlated with gross domestic product growth, the money demand model explains the positive short-run correlation between exchange rate movements and stock returns)
C) hurts competitiveness and stock market return
Session 18 - Reading 68 International Asset Pricing - LOS n. (2023, Aug 02). Retrieved from https://paperap.com/session-18-reading-68-international-asset-pricing-los-n/