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Relative PPP for finding Spot Rates -- Q
In the below Q, they provide beginning spot rate ($1.50) and ending spot rate ($1.60) but if I try to obtain the ending spot rate using Relative Purchasing Power Parity, I don't get it (the spot rate goes down, not up). Am I missing something or was this a careless mistake on their part? P.S. In another similar Q in this topic they use IRP to find the end of year spot rate so I thought using Relative PPP would make sense since you shoudl theoretically get same results.
A U.S. investor purchased a U.K. bond one year ago. The exchange rate at the time was 1.5 to 1 (dollars to pounds) and the beginning-of-period ratio of the price levels of the consumption baskets was 2 ($ to £). During the year, inflation in the U.S. was 5% and in the U.K. was 10%. Today the exchange rate is 1.6. What is the end-of-period real exchange rate?
A) 1.64.
B) 0.84.
C) 1.45.
Your answer: B was correct!
The end-of-period real exchange rate is calculated as: X = S (PF/PD). Here, the new price levels are 1.1 for the U.K. (1 |
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