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Market Adjustment Mechanism for Real Returns
An international investor observes that the real return on a one-year government bond in Country X is 4%, while the real return on a comparable bond in Country Y is 2%. Assuming capital can move freely between the two countries and there are no differences in risk, describe the sequence of events that economic theory predicts will occur in the financial markets of both countries. What is the final equilibrium state for their real returns?
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International Investment and Real Returns
Suppose the nominal interest rate in Country A is 8% and its inflation rate is 3%. In Country B, the nominal interest rate is 6% and its inflation rate is 2%. Assuming financial markets are integrated and capital can move freely, what long-run adjustment is most likely to occur based on the principle that real returns tend to equalize across countries?
Implications of Equalized Real Returns
According to the theory that real returns tend to equalize across countries with integrated financial markets, if one country consistently experiences a higher inflation rate than another, its nominal interest rate must also be consistently higher in the long run.
Market Adjustment Mechanism for Real Returns
In a world with fully integrated financial markets where real returns are equalized across countries in the long run, match each economic scenario in a domestic country (relative to a foreign country) with its most likely long-run consequence.
Evaluating the Real-World Applicability of Interest Rate Equalization
Consider two countries, A and B, with fully integrated financial markets. The nominal interest rate in Country A is 5% and its inflation rate is 2%. The nominal interest rate in Country B is 7%. For the long-run condition of equal real returns between the two countries to hold, what must be the inflation rate in Country B?
Derivation of Real Return Equalization
Imagine a world with two large, financially integrated economies: Country A and Country B. The real rate of return on investment in Country A is currently 4%, while in Country B it is 2%. Given this difference, what is the most likely immediate reaction of global investors and the subsequent effect on interest rates?