Exchange Rate Pass-through in South Africa: Panel Evidence from Individual Goods and Services
Exchange Rate Pass-through in South Africa: Panel Evidence from Individual Goods and Services
This study estimates pass-through for South Africa using samples of final goods and services, and homogenous imports. Estimated pass-through to consumer goods prices is low, roughly 16 per cent in the two years following an exchange rate change; surprisingly, it is somewhat higher for services. Deviations from long run PPP appear to disappear relatively quickly, with a half-life of about 16 months. For imports, pass-through estimates are much higher, averaging around 60 per cent, but with wide source-country variation. Finally, there is virtually no support for a simple linear trend change in either pass-through or in reversion to PPP during the sample.
CITATION: Parsley, David C.. Exchange Rate Pass-through in South Africa: Panel Evidence from Individual Goods and Services . : Taylor & Francis , 2012. The Journal of Development Studies, Vol. 48, Issue 7, July 2012, pp. 832-846 - Available at: https://library.au.int/exchange-rate-pass-through-south-africa-panel-evidence-individual-goods-and-services-8