Volume 18, Issue 1 March 2022

Exchange Rate Shocks and Inflation Co-movement in the Euro Area

Abstract

This paper decomposes the time-varying effect of exogenous exchange rate shocks on euro-area countries' inflation into country-specific (idiosyncratic) and regionwide (common) components. To do so, we propose a flexible empirical framework based on dynamic factor models subject to drifting parameters and exogenous information. We show that exogenous shocks are behind an important share of nominal EUR/USD fluctuations over the recent years. Our main results indicate that headline inflation in euro-area countries has become significantly more affected by exchange rate shocks since the early 2010s. While in the case of headline inflation this increasing sensitivity is solely reliant on the idiosyncratic component, for energy inflation it is based on both idiosyncratic and common components. By contrast, exchange rate shocks do not seem to have a significant impact on the core component of headline inflation.

Authors

  • Danilo Leiva-Leon
  • Jaime Martinez-Martin
  • Eva Ortega

JEL codes

  • C32
  • E31
  • F31
  • F41

Other papers in this issue

Nergiz Dincer and Barry Eichengreen and Petra Geraats

Olivier Coibion and Yuriy Gorodnichenko and Michael Weber

Michal Brzoza-Brzezina and Marcin Kolasa and Krzysztof Makarski

Alin Marius Andries and Anca Maria Podpiera and Nicu Sprincean