Exchange rate pass-through to prices in Mexico: a regional analysis
Fecha de publicación
2024Author
Martínez Aranda, Samuel
Formato
application/PDF
URL del recurso
http://hdl.handle.net/11651/5962Idioma
eng
Acceso
Acceso restringido
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This paper examines the regional variation in the response of various consumer price índices (headline, core, services, and goods) to exchange rate changes over the period from January 2003 to September 2023. The findings indicate that, although a greater pass-through effect is observed in consumer price indices in regions proximate to the United States, the differences are not statistically significant, suggesting no evidence of heterogeneity in this pass-through effect between different regions. We employ local projections (LP) with an instrumental variable identification strategy, to generate estimates of exchange rate pass-through (ERPT) to consumer prices in Mexico. The estimates obtained through LP indicate that ERPT to consumer prices in Mexico is generally more pronounced in the goods indices, both at the national and regional levels, while services indices show less sensitivity to exchange rate fluctuations. The lack of significant heterogeneity in the response of prices to the exchange rate suggests that the Exchange rate channel of monetary policy is homogeneous across regions, indicating that policies to counteract pass-through do not need to be implemented at the regional level.
Editorial
El Autor
Grado
Maestría en Economía
Tipo
Tesis de maestría
Asesor
Dr. Juan Ramón Hernández González
Cita
Martínez Aranda, Samuel. "Exchange rate pass-through to prices in Mexico: a regional analysis". Tesis de maestría. Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, 2024. http://hdl.handle.net/11651/5962Materia
Foreign exchange rates -- Mexico -- 2003-2023 -- Econometric models -- Case studies.
Prices -- Effect of foreign exchange rates on -- Mexico -- 2003-2023 -- Econometric models -- Case studies.
Prices -- Effect of monetary policy on -- Mexico -- 2003-2023 -- Econometric models -- Case studies.