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Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

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Page 1: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry

(Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations)

API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Page 2: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Recap: Financial Integration Pros & Cons

• Pros: In API-120 & API-119, we learned that functions of international financial markets include:– Consumption Smoothing

• break the timing between production & consumption– Risk Diversification

• insurance again shocks– Efficient Allocation of Capital

• capital is at its most productive use; • investors earn a higher return.

• Cons: – These come with costs, such as volatility & crises.– Capital does not always seem to flow the right direction!

Page 3: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Evidence from International Data

• In previous API119 lectures we saw many puzzles in the literature:

• The theoretical benefits of financial integration do not match evidence from international data.– Feldstein-Horioka Puzzle

• High saving-investment correlations– Risk Sharing Puzzle

• Low consumption correlations– Lucas Paradox

• Capital does not flow from rich to poor.

Page 4: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

The Feldstein-Horioka Puzzle

Feldstein-Horioka regression: (I/GDP) = α + β (NS/GDP) + v.

Feldstein (1980) argued that if capital were perfectly mobile, he would find β = 0. Instead, β was much closer to 1.

The coefficient (“saving retention”)

fell a bit subsequently, but still high.

Page 5: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

*

* See Table 2, Appendix I in this powerpoint.

Page 6: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

There are many critiques of Feldstein-Horioka

• (I) National Saving is endogenous• The “intertemporal optimization” critique --

Private saving varies with the business cycle,– or with population or productivity growth.– Often: “A theoretical model can be constructed in which capital mobility

is perfect and yet the saving-investment correlation is high.”– Obstfeld, Summers, Tesar…

• The “maintained external balance” critique –– Fiscal policy is endogenous: governments react to trade imbalances– Tobin, Westphal, Caprio & Howard, Roubini, Bayoumi, Buiter.

• (II) The world real interest rate is endogenous– = The “big-country” critique.

– Murphy, Tobin, Obstfeld.– But that doesn’t help explain the cross-section findings.

Page 7: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

• The most common critique is that NS is endogenous,

• which should call for an Instrumental Variable.

• IV for Public Saving (BS): military spending

• IV for Household Saving: dependency ratio.

• Yet the IV estimates of the F-H coefficient (“saving retention”) are as high as the OLS estimates !

* See Table 3, Appendix I in this powerpoint.

Page 8: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Evidence from Intra-national Data Studies of data among regions within a common currency do not

show the puzzles: current account deficits & surpluses are big enough to allow saving and investment to go their separate ways

• Feldstein-Horioka tests on regions within a common currency– Sub-regions within the UK: 

• Bayoumi, Tamim, & Andrew Rose (1992), "Domestic Saving and Intra-National Capital Flows," European Economic Review.

– Provinces within Canada (for 1961-1990) :• Bayoumi, Tamim, & Gabriel Sterne (1992), "Regional Trading Blocs, Mobile Capital and Exchange Rate Coordination," IMF.

– Prefectures of Japan:• Dekle, Robert (1996) "Saving-investment associations and capital mobility: On the evidence from Japanese regional data," JIE, Aug.

• Iwamota & van Wincoop (2000): Estimated coefficient is 0.3 in cross section, 0.2 in panel. “Intranational versus International Saving and Investment co-movements, ” in Intranational Macroeconomics, Hess & van Wincoop, eds..

– States within the US (1950s data):

• Sinn, Stefan (1992+), "Saving-Investment Correlations and Capital Mobility: On the Evidence from Annual Data," Economic Journal.

• The same for nations under the gold standard (Bayoumi, 1990).

• The finding is never a high positive correlation between NS & I– as is standard in international studies.

Page 9: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

The prediction of the full risk sharing model also holds up better on intra-national data:

–  Crucini & Hess (2000): cross-region consumption correlations > output correlations.

• On data from US states, Canada provinces & Japan prefectures.» “International versus Intranational Risk Sharing,” in Intranational Macroeconomics, Hess & van Wincoop, eds.

– Kalemli-Ozcan, Sorensen & Yosha (AER, 2003): intranational risk sharing >> international risk sharing.

• On data from US states, Canada provinces, Japan prefectures, UK regions, Italian regions, & Spanish regions

• Summary:– Regions that are known to share a common currency and to be highly integrated with

respect to their goods markets pass the Feldstein-Horioka and risk sharing tests, while standard international data fail the tests.

– Also, recall that tests by price-based criteria such Covered Interest Parity, financial markets are highly integrated.

– An implication: exchange rate variability or other sources of imperfect integration of goods markets may be the source of real interest differentials and quantity-based findings of “low capital mobility”

– although this is not necessarily the authors’ interpretations of their own results.

Page 10: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Optimal Currency Areas• Symmetry of GDP fluctuations is one of the main

criteria for Optimal Currency Areas (OCA).• It goes back to Mundell (1961).• OCA theory says that the benefits of a common

currency outweigh the costs if:– the shocks and cycles are similar– the countries are open to trade with each other– the degree of labor mobility is high– a system of risk-sharing is in place

• through stabilizing fiscal transfers• or through stabilizing private capital flows.

Page 11: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Endogeneity – “Lucas Critique”• OCA theory talks as if trade patterns and other parameters are

exogenous and unchanging.

• But the original motivation for currency unions such as EMU was to promote trade within the region!– Rose (2000) showed that countries with a common currency do

indeed trade more, as much as x2 or x3.

• An application of Lucas Critique: you cannot rely on ex ante statistical estimates to analyze the outcome of a change in regime (joining), because the “parameters” will change after the new regime is in effect!– You do not know in advance if it is optimal or not.– One would have to derive everything from deeper parameters that

don’t change.

Page 12: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

• Krugman (1993): when MU boosts intra-regional trade, – countries specialize according to comparative advantage.– So trade shocks become more idiosyncratic (asymmetric).

– Countries share production risk via integrated capital markets.

• More specialization in production induces a higher degree of asymmetry (lower correlation of cycles)– => Even if countries appear to satisfy OCA criterion ex ante,

• they may fail it ex post.

If intra-regional trade is endogenous with respect to MU decision,

then cyclical correlations are likely to be as well.

(I) Eichengreen-Krugman hypothesis on the sign of the endogenous effect of on correlations.

Page 13: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

(II) Frankel-Rose hypothesison the sign of the endogenous effect of on correlations.

• Once countries are in EMU and trade more– it leads to a lower degree of asymmetry,– more highly correlated business cycles.– => Even if countries appear to fail OCA criterion ex ante,

• they may satisfy it ex post.

• FR: empirically, more trade leads to more symmetry

• Frankel-Rose (1998), “The Endogeneity of the Optimum Currency Area Criteria,” Econ.J.

Page 14: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Frankel-Rose Regression

• Corr (GDPi, GDPj) = a + b Tradeij + controls + error– i-j are countries (pair-wise regression);– Cross-section estimated over 5 year window

• b is estimated to be positivewith strong statistical significance,– even when endogeneity of trade is handled by IV

• from the gravity model (proximity of pair, size, etc.).– Supports F-R hypothesis over Eichengreen-Krugman.

Page 15: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Frankel-Rose: Both OCA criteria, not just intra-union trade but also

symmetry, are more likely to hold ex post than ex ante.Trade

Correlation of Business Cycles Across Countries

Countries should float

Countries should adopt common currency

OCA criterion line

“symmetry” of shocks

Page 16: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Evidence on the Competing Channel: Building Block I

• Kalemli-Ozcan, Sorensen & Yosha (2003):more capital market integration => more specialization, using data from US states

– Regression: Spec i = a + b fin.integration i + error– Spec i is a state/region within a country– Spec i measures how much i’s production differs from

the rest of states within the country– Integration i measures how financially integrated is i

with the rest of the states within the country.– Estimate of b is positive and significant.

Page 17: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Evidence on Competing Channel: Building Block II

• Kalemli-Ozcan, Sorensen, Yosha (2001) (KSY): more specialization => less asymmetry.

• Recall FR Regression:– Corr (GDPi, GDPj) = a + b Tradeij + controls + error.

• KSY Regression:– Corr (GDPi, GDPagg) = a + b Fin.Integrationi + controls + error

– Dependent Variable ≡ correlation of i with the aggregate– (country i is in)

Page 18: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

To Summarize

Trade Finance Policy Knowledge

Intra-Industry Inter-Industry

Fluctuations Asymmetry LESS

MORE

LESS

LESS

MORE

MORE

Frankel & Rose Kalemli-Ozcan, Sorenson & Yosha

Page 19: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Which one dominates?

• Empirical papers above show both are important.

• No study yet runs a horse race between the two channels – which would require pair-wise data

both on trade linkages and on financial linkages

• But we have an experiment to evaluate– European Crisis: 2010-…..

Page 20: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Joining Euro Zone

• One of the arguments made in favor of Euro zone in the past is that even when member countries are hit by asymmetric shocks, they still do not need independent monetary policies

• Even if output shocks are asymmetric, consumption will not be, thanks to integrated capital markets!

• Sure enough, the periphery countries ran huge CA deficits after joining: NS << I .

Page 21: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

After the formation of the Euro, current account imbalances rose sharply

Page 22: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Current Crisis

• But the current euro crisis is a clear indication that such insurance has not been achieved among Euro zone countries!

Page 23: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Smoothing Fluctuations: Evidence

• US Smoothing (1999-2005):– Capital Markets: 55%– Federal Government: 15%– Credit Markets: 30%

• Euro Zone Smoothing (1999-2005):– Capital Markets: 10%– Euro Zone Government: 0% (there is no such gov)– Credit Markets: 35%

Page 24: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Euro Zone Fluctuations and Smoothing

• Clearly capital markets did not do the job, whether because:– Not integrated enough– Not enough time passed since common currency– Markets still segmented

– with different laws and jurisdictions– Or maybe capital flows are procyclical

– contrary to theory !

• And of course this is not a fiscal union– so there are supposed to be no fiscal transfers.

Page 25: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Spreads over German Bunds show integrated markets

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Greece

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Big question: why did markets think these periphery countries were as safe as Germany upon joining euro?

Page 26: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Maastricht Criteria

• Many viewed that convergence according to Maastricht criteria will prepare the countries for OCA. Most important criteria:

– Debt levels < 60% of GDP – All countries violated

Page 27: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

European Debt Levels

Page 28: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Why it is a political problem in a currency area with no fiscal union:

Exposure to Greek Debt

• ECB (bought in open market) 55.0

• Greek banks (held as collateral by the ECB) 40.0

• Greek pension funds and insurance comp. 30.0

• French banks 56.9

• German banks 28.3

• UK banks 14.7

• Portuguese banks 10.2

• US banks 8.7

• Dutch banks 5.2

• Italian banks 4.5

• Austrian banks 3.3

• Swiss banks 3.0

• Belgian banks 2.0

• Japanese banks 1.3

• Spanish banks 1.1

• Others (insurance, hedge funds) 20.0

Page 29: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Frankel Appendices on MeasuringInternational Capital Mobility

1. Feldstein-Horioka for developing countries.

2. Interest Rate Parity: Country premium• vs. currency premium for Latin America in 1994.• Periphery euro countries versus emerging markets 2006-

10.

Page 30: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Appendix 1:The Feldstein-

Horioka coefficieint (“saving retention”)appears no higher

for developing countries than

for industrialized countries –

the opposite of what one would expect if

measured barriers to capital mobility.

Page 31: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

ˡ

ˡ

• IV for Public Saving (BS): military spending

• IV for Household Saving: dependency ratio.

• Yet the IV estimates of the F-H coefficient (“saving retention”) are as high as the OLS estimates !

Page 32: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Appendix 2:Measuring factors in interest differentials

• Sometimes the effect of capital controls can be isolated by offshore-onshore interest differentials– including by the covered interest differential

to take out currencies difference (for countries with forward markets),

– or differential in local $-linked bonds vs. US T-bills.

• Sometimes currency premia can be decomposed.

• The effect of default risk can be isolated by the sovereign spread on bank loans or bonds (EMBI).

Page 33: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Total interest differential (Local – US )

= (Currency premium) + (country premium)

= (Δse + exchange risk premium) + (country premium)

On the eve of the Mexican peso crisis

Page 34: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Sovereign interest rates, in 3 crises

Source: IMF

Page 35: Financial Integration, Monetary Unions, and Symmetry (Correlation of Cyclical Fluctuations) API-119 Lecture 8: Guest Lecture by Jeff Frankel

Worst mis-pricing: Greece’s sovereign spreads 2003-08