Risk Management
Risk Management
Student:
Elena Cristina BACIU,
ISE
Purchasing
power (sometimes
retroactively
called adjusted for
inflation)
CONCEPT:
The concept of purchasing power parity allows one to
estimate what the exchange rate between two currencies
would have to be in order for the exchange to be on par
with the purchasing power of the two countries' currencies.
Using that PPP rate for hypothetical currency conversions, a
given amount of one currency thus has the same purchasing
power whether used directly to purchase a market basket of
goods or used to convert at the PPP rate to the other
currency and then purchase the market basket using that
currency. Observed deviations of the exchange rate from
purchasing power parity are measured by deviations of
the real exchange rate from its PPP value of 1.
FUNCTIONS:
The purchasing power parity exchange rate serves two main
functions. PPP exchange rates can be useful for making
comparisons between countries because they stay fairly constant
from day to day or week to week and only change modestly, if at
all,from year to year. Second, over a period of years, exchange
rates do tend to move in the general direction of the PPP exchange
rate and there is some value to knowing in which direction the
exchange rate is more likely to shift over the long run.
LAW OF PRICES
Although it may seem as if PPPs and the law of one price are the
same, there is a difference: the law of one price applies to
individual commodities whereas PPP applies to the general price
level. If the law of one price is true for all commodities then PPP
is also therefore true; however, when discussing the validity of
PPP, some argue that the law of one price does not need to be true
exactly for PPP to be valid. If the law of one price is not true for a
certain commodity, the price levels will not differ enough from the
level predicted by PPP.
The Big Mac index, also known as Big Mac PPP, is a survey done
by The Economist magazine that is used to measure
the purchasing power parity (PPP) between nations, using the
price of a Big Mac as the benchmark. Using the idea of PPP from
economics, any changes in exchange rates between nations would
be seen in the change in price of a basket of goods which remains
constant across borders. The Big Mac index suggests that, in
theory, changes in exchange rates between currencies should
affect the price that consumers pay for a Big Mac in a particular
nation, replacing the "basket" with the popular hamburger.
For example, if the price of a Big Mac is $4.00 in the U.S. as
compared to 2.5 pounds sterling in Britain, we would expect that
the exchange rate would be 1.60 (4/2.5 = 1.60). If the exchange
rate of dollars to pounds is any greater, the Big Mac Index would
state that the pound was over-valued, any lower and it would be
under-valued.
Purchasing power parity (PPP) states that the price of a good in one
country is equal to its price in another country after adjusting for the
exchange rate between the two countries.
As a light-hearted annual test of PPP, The Economist has tracked the
price of McDonald's Big Mac burger in many countries since 1986.
This experiment - known as the Big Mac PPP - and similar tests have
been underway for decades. Here we take a look at this unique
indicator, and find out what the price of the ubiquitous Big Mac in a
given country can tell us about its wealth.
In theory, the law of one price would hold that if, to take an
example, the Canadian dollar were to be significantly overvalued
relative to the U.S. dollar according to the Big Mac Index, that
gap should be unsustainable because Canadians would import
their Big Macs from or travel to the U.S. to consume them, thus
putting upward demand pressure on the U.S. dollar by virtue of
Canadians buying the U.S. dollars needed to purchase the U.S.made Big Macs and simultaneously placing downward supply
pressure on the Canadian dollar by virtue of Canadians selling
their currency in order to buy those same U.S. dollars.
The alternative to this exchange rate adjustment would be an
adjustment in prices, with Canadian McDonald's stores compelled
to lower prices to remain competitive. Either way, the valuation
difference should be reduced assuming perfect competition and a
perfectly tradable good. In practice, of course, the Big Mac is not
a perfectly tradable good and there may also be capital flows that
sustain relative demand for the Canadian dollar. The difference in
price may have its origins in a variety of factors besides direct
input costs such as government regulations and product
differentiation.
Country
Argentina
13
Euro area
+12
Australia
+12
Finland
+17
Austria
+5
France
+12
Belgium
+18
Germany
+13
Brazil
+29
Greece
+3
Britain
Hong Kong
50
Canada
+24
Hungary
13
Chile
India
63
China
41
Indonesia
35
Colombia
+11
Ireland
+8
Costa Rica
+1
Israel
Czech Republic
15
Italy
+20
Denmark
+19
Japan
20
Egypt
45
Latvia
25
Estonia
16
Lithuania
30