INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL ECONOMICS

INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL ECONOMICS

Guido Traficante, Jose Luis Peydro Alcalde

Instructional goals

The course aims at providing the students with a wide knowledge and understanding of macroeconomic fluctuations and financial dynamics in relation to economic policies, exchange rate regimes, and foreign exchange markets.

Intended learning outcomes

Knowledge and understanding: The course will offer key theoretical tool to analyze how market forces and institutional arrangements determine the exchange rates in the short and long run, global imbalances, crises, and economic policy responses. Applying knowledge and understanding: The students will be able to understand how economic policies and market forces shape exchange rate fluctuations, and how exchange rate risk, impacting on basic corporate finance transactions, can be covered. Making judgments: We expect students to be able to forecast the short and long-run impacts of major public policies on exchange rates and other key economic variables. Also, we expect students to attribute the appropriate relevance to the exchange rate dynamics in the global business environment. Communication skills: This course will give the students the possibility to acquire and understand major terms and concepts in order to communicate their ideas, proposals, analysis and critical reasoning in the field of international financial economics in the most effective and appropriate way. Students’ presentations on the current situation of the world economy are scheduled through the whole class. Learning skills: This course will contribute to empower learners giving them the tools to evaluate in an independent way if and how certain economic policies impact on investing and financing decisions.

Course Contents

The course will cover the following topics: (1) Exchange rate (ER) fundamentals and the forex market: functioning and history of exchange rate regimes; principles of arbitrage; interest parity conditions; hedging the ER risk in corporate business. (2) Monetary and asset approaches to the determination of the ER: money demand and money supply; equilibrium in the money market; the ER transmission channel of central bank policies; purchasing power parity; the monetary approach in the long run; ER overshooting. (3) The IS-LM-FX model: fixed versus floating exchange rates; fiscal and monetary policy in an open economy; ER crises; the euro and the EU economy; currency crises.

Reference Books

Robert C. Feenstra and Alan M. Taylor, International Macroeconomics, McMillan Education, 5th edition (2021).

Teaching Methods

Lectures, interactive sessions consisting of practices, exercises, guest lectures and seminars, discussions of cases studies and relevant empirical facts.

Assessment Method

Group works, individual assessment, final written exam.

Thesis assignment criteria

Strong interest in the topics developed in the course and in reading advanced scientific articles.

Week 1

Review: money demand, money supply, money mkt equilibrium, derivation of the LM curve, horizontal LM and liquidity trap, zero lower bound; exchange rates basics

Week 2

Essentials of exchange rates: markets, financial instruments, actors; introduction to arbitrage

Week 3

CIP, UIP, evidence

Week 4

Monetary approach long run: LOP, PPP, Mac Index

Week 5

The asset approach: mon pol in short run

Week 6

Monetary approach in the short and long run: overshooting, trilemma

Week 7

Fixed vs Flexible Exchange Rate System

Week 8

Financial crises

Week 9

Banking and related non-bank intermediaries

Week 10

Monetary policies and related policies

Week 11

FX interventions

Week 12

Geoeconomics