Uruguay: Selected Issues
January 31, 2018
Summary
This Selected Issues paper investigates the impact of exchange rate movements on private consumption in Uruguay. Uruguay is a highly dollarized economy, which makes the relationship between exchange rate movements and private consumption particularly complex. The paper shows that a large share of Uruguayan households is liquidity constrained, which allows the transitory real income shocks brought about by exchange rate pass-through to have a significant impact on consumption. Moreover, exchange rate pass-through is highly heterogenous, with relative prices of durables increasing (decreasing) following a depreciation (appreciation). This creates incentives for households to engage in intertemporal substitution where they buy durables when they are relatively cheaper. Data from Input–Output tables show that Uruguay produces a nontrivial amount of the tradable, durable goods it consumes, opening the door to contractionary depreciations. The results offer a potential explanation for the often noted ‘excess volatility of consumption’ in emerging markets for the case of Uruguay.
Subject: Consumption, Exchange rates, Foreign exchange, Income, Labor productivity, National accounts, Private consumption, Production
Keywords: Caribbean, Consumption, CR, credit dollarization, deposit dollarization, dollarization, exchange rate, exchange rate movement, Exchange rates, Global, government investment multiplier, Income, ISCR, Labor productivity, Private consumption, productivity, VAR model
Pages:
49
Volume:
2018
DOI:
Issue:
024
Series:
Country Report No. 2018/024
Stock No:
1URYEA2018002
ISBN:
9781484339824
ISSN:
1934-7685





