RDP 2010-07: Monetary Policy and the Exchange Rate: Evaluation of VAR Models 2. A Small Open Economy DSGE Model

This section presents the small open economy DSGE model. The model is based on a modified version of that proposed by Galí and Monacelli (2005) and is described in Jääskelä and Kulish (2010). All variables are expressed in log deviations from steady state and the key log-linear equations are given below.

2.1 The Large Economy

Variables with a star superscript correspond to the large, foreign economy, which can be described with a standard set of new Keynesian closed economy equations.

Firms operate under monopolistic competition in the goods market and Calvo-price stickiness. Factor markets are competitive and goods are produced with a constant returns to scale technology. The Phillips curve in the large economy is of the form:

where: Inline Equation is the foreign inflation rate; Inline Equation is the foreign output gap; the parameter κ is strictly positive and captures the degree of price rigidities; the household's discount factor, β, lies between zero and one; and Et denotes expectations conditional on information at time t.

The IS-curve implies that the current level of the foreign output gap depends on its expected future level Equation, the ex-ante short-term real interest rate, foreign total factor productivity Equation and a foreign aggregate demand disturbance Equation, as follows:

where: Equation is the foreign nominal short-term interest rate; σ is strictly positive and governs intertemporal substitution; Inline Equation is the persistence of Inline Equation;Inline Equation is the persistence of Inline Equation; and ϕ1 is equal to Inline Equation, with φ > 0 governing the elasticity of labour supply.

Foreign monetary policy follows a Taylor rule of the form:

where Inline Equation is an independent and identically distributed (iid) foreign monetary policy shock, with zero mean and standard deviation Inline Equation. Inline Equation and Inline Equation capture the reaction of the foreign interest rate to the deviation of foreign inflation from target (set to zero) and the foreign output gap.

The potential level of foreign output, Inline Equation, is the level that would prevail in the absence of nominal rigidities. For the large economy, it can be shown that the actual level of output, Inline Equation, and the output gap, Inline Equation, obey the following relationship:

Foreign exogenous processes evolve according to:

where: the shocks Inline Equation and Inline Equation are iid with zero mean and standard deviations Inline Equation and Inline Equation, respectively; and the autoregressive parameters, Inline Equation and Inline Equation are less than unity in absolute value.

2.2 The Small Open Economy

In the small open economy, the IS-curve links the output gap, xt, to its expected future value, the ex-ante real interest rate (where the nominal interest rate is deflated by the expected rate of domestically produced goods inflation), the expected growth rate of foreign output, foreign and domestic aggregate demand shocks and domestic total factor productivity. The open economy's IS-curve takes the following form:

where: ρx and ρa are the persistence parameters of domestic aggregate demand and domestic productivity shocks, respectively; and the parameters σa, ϕ2, ϕ3 and ϕ4 are functions of deep parameters. In particular, it can be shown that:

where: α ∈ [0, 1] captures the degree of openness; τ is the intertemporal elasticity of substitution between foreign- and domestically produced goods; and ι is the elasticity of substitution across varieties of foreign-produced goods.

The dynamics of domestically produced goods inflation, πh,t, are governed by a Phillips curve equation:

where: καλ(σα + φ); λInline Equation; θ governs the degree of price stickiness; and vπ,t is a cost-push shock.

Monetary policy in the small economy is assumed to follow a Taylor rule that sets the nominal interest rate, rt, in response to its own lagged value, the deviation of consumer price inflation, πt, from its target (set to zero) and the output gap, xt, as follows:

where εr,t is an iid monetary policy shock with zero mean and standard deviation σr.

The terms of trade, st, are defined as the price of foreign goods (pf,t) in terms of the price of home goods (ph,t). That is, st = pf,tph,t. The consumer price index is a weighted average of the price of foreign- and domestically produced goods pt = (1 − α) ph,t + αpf,t. It follows that consumer price inflation and domestically produced goods inflation are linked by the expression:

The nominal exchange rate, et, is defined as the price of foreign currency in terms of the domestic currency, so positive values of Δet indicate a nominal depreciation of the domestic currency. The law of one price is assumed to hold, so pf,t = et + Inline Equation, which implies that the terms of trade can also be written as st = et + Inline Equationph,t. Combining these expressions, it is easy to show that the real exchange rate, qt, is proportional to the terms of trade:

Complete international securities markets, together with the market clearing conditions, lead to the following relationship between the terms of trade, output and shocks to demand:

The relationship between the actual level of output, yt, and the output gap, xt, satisfies the following equation:

Finally, the domestic exogenous processes evolve according to:

where: the shocks εa,t, επ,t, and εx,t are iid with zero mean and standard deviations σa, σπ, and σx, respectively; and the autoregressive parameters, ρa, ρπ and ρx are less than unity in absolute value.