The International Macroeconomics Chair has the pleasure to invite you to a lecture given by Oleg Itskhoki (Harvard University)

Published on the 28th of April 2025

Conférences
15 May 2025 - 15:00

The Paris School of Economics has the pleasure to invite you to
a lecture by Oleg Itskhoki (Harvard University).
organized by the International Macroeconomics Chair:  

Breaking Parity: Equilibrium exchange rates and currency premia

The conference will be held at the Paris School of Economics and will be followed by a discussion with Etienne Fize (PSE, IPP).

Thursday, May 15, 2025 ; 15:00-16:30 (Paris Time)
Paris School of Economics
48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris
Daniel Cohen Amphitheater

Registration is mandatory before May 13, 2025

Abstract

Breaking Parity: Equilibrium exchange rates and currency premia

The authors propose a partial equilibrium model of frictional currency intermediation to derive an empirical framework that explains the joint behavior of interest rates, currency premia and spot and forward exchange rates, both in the cross section of currencies and in the time series for individual currencies. In the cross section, the excess supply of local-currency savings is the key determinant of low relative interest rates, negative covered and uncovered currency premia, expensive currency forwards; and vice versa. In the time series,  covered currency premia change in concert driven by aggregate financial market conditions. In contrast, uncovered currency premia move frequently in response to idiosyncratic currency demand shocks which we capture with the dynamics of net currency futures positions of dealer banks. Sharp spot exchange rate movements accommodate the equilibrium dynamics of predictable currency returns necessary to ensure intermediation of currency demand shocks, irrespective of their origin. Changes in the net currency futures positions of dealer banks account for most of the variation in the spot exchange rate for every currency.

Oleg Itskhoki

Oleg Itskhoki is moving to the Department of Economics at Harvard University, after holding the Venu and Ana Kotamraju Endowed Chair in Economics at the University of California, Los Angeles, and previously a Professor of Economics and International Affairs at Princeton University. He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, an NBER research associate, a CEPR research affiliate, and an associate editor of the American Economic Review. His research interests are in macroeconomics and international economics, where he studies globalization and labor markets, and currencies, exchange rates and international relative prices, as well as other topics.

This event is organized by the International Macroeconomics Chair, which is the result of a partnership between the Banque de France and PSE. Sharing the same vision about scientific needs on international issues, these two organisations joint their efforts to build a chair with the objective of fostering the development of research on the financial & monetary international system, and in international macro-economics.