Exchange Rate Regimes

Similar documents
Ch. 2 International Monetary System. Motives for Int l Financial Markets. Motives for Int l Financial Markets

Chapter 18. The International Financial System

Simultaneous Equilibrium in Output and Financial Markets: The Short Run Determination of Output, the Exchange Rate and the Current Account

The International Monetary System

Chapter 7 Fixed Exchange Rate Regimes and Short Run Macroeconomic Policy

Study Questions. Lecture 16 Fixed Versus Floating Exchange Rates

MONETARY POLICY FRAMEWORKS AND STRATEGIES

Economics of Money, Banking, and Fin. Markets, 10e (Mishkin) Chapter 18 The International Financial System

To Fix or Not to Fix?

Lecture 20: Exchange Rate Regimes. Prof.J.Frankel

OVERVIEW OF MONETARY POLICY REGIMES. Jan Gottschalk, TAOLAM This activity is supported by a grant from Japan. Yangon October 2, 2014

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 16 Fixed Versus Floating Exchange Rates

2- EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES

The Mundell-Fleming Model. Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko

Chapter 18. The International Financial System Intervention in the Foreign Exchange Market

Test Bank Multinational Business Finance 14th Edition by Eiteman Stonehill Moffett

LECTURE XIV. 31 July Tuesday, July 31, 12

Welcome to: International Finance

Chapter 9 Essential macroeconomic tools. Baldwin&Wyplosz 2009 The Economics of European Integration, 3 rd Edition

Challenges of financial globalisation and dollarisation for monetary policy: the case of Peru

file:///c:/users/moha/desktop/mac8e/new folder (13)/CourseComp...

Exchange Rate Targeting and Currency Boards

Figure: EUR-USD Exchange Rate

Macroeconomic Management in Emerging-Market Economies with Open Capital Accounts. Outline

Chapter 21 The International Monetary System: Past, Present, and Future

Macro for SCS Nov. 29, International Trade & Finance

Each of the major international capital market-related crises since 1994

Developing Countries Chapter 22

UC Berkeley Fall Final examination SOLUTION SHEET

19.2 Exchange Rates in the Long Run Introduction 1/24/2013. Exchange Rates and International Finance. The Nominal Exchange Rate

Lecture 6: Intermediate macroeconomics, autumn Lars Calmfors

Asian Development Bank Institute. ADBI Working Paper Series

Empirical research, considers 20 countries with fixed exchange rate, crawling peg or floating within a band.

Exchange Rate Policy and Monetary Policy Implementation

Name: Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory II, Fall 2009 Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko Final Exam (35 points). December 8.

Replies to memo questions, 09/09/03

Lecture 1: Traditional Open Macro Models and Monetary Policy

7. EXCHANGE RATE AND ITS ECONOMIC EFFECTS

Fixed Exchange Rate Regimes and Short Run Macroeconomic Policy. Prof. George Alogoskoufis Fletcher School, TuAs University

Economic Policy in PNG:

THE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG School of Economics & Finance st Semester Examination. Economics: ECON0302 International Finance Dr C W Yuen

The International Financial Architecture

Chapter 6. Government Influence on Exchange Rates. Lecture Outline

EC202 Macroeconomics

Exchange Rate Policy and Regimes

Transformative Growth in Eastern Africa: Catalysts and Constraints

14.05 Intermediate Applied Macroeconomics Problem Set 5

Prepared by Iordanis Petsas To Accompany. by Paul R. Krugman and Maurice Obstfeld

Chapter 17. Exchange Rates and International Economic Policy

Introduction to Macroeconomics M

Chapter 19 International Monetary Systems: An Historical Overview

Exchange Rate Regimes and Monetary Policy: Options for China and East Asia

International Currency Experiences: National and Global Choices. International currency experiences in the 20th C. Choices for an exchange rate system

483 Subject Index. Global Depositiory Receipts, 250 Grassman s law, 148, 160

Inflation Targeting in Hungary Lessons and Challenges. Agnes Csermely Economics Department. March 30, 2005

Fragility of Incomplete Monetary Unions

macro macroeconomics Aggregate Demand in the Open Economy N. Gregory Mankiw CHAPTER TWELVE PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich fifth edition

Chapter 13 Exchange Rates, Business Cycles, and Macroeconomic Policy in the Open Economy

The Role of Asian Currencies in the International Monetary System

Provision of FX hedge by the public sector: the Brazilian experience

Notes on the monetary transmission mechanism in the Czech economy

Chapter 24 CRISES IN EMERGING MARKETS

The Conduct of Monetary Policy

Classifying exchange rate regimes: a statistical analysis of alternative methods. Abstract

Challenges to Central Banking from Globalized Financial Systems

Overview. Stanley Fischer

"Dollarisation in Emerging Market Economies" Part 3: OFFICIAL DOLLARISATION

Monetary Policy and Inflation Targeting

Fourth Edition. Olivier Blanchard. Massachusetts Institute of Technology PEARSON. Prentice Hall. Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458

Development Policy Macro Management and Development Macro Stability and Growth: Case Study of Vietnam

Review Questions (with Answers) Lecture 14 Pegging the Exchange Rate

Lesson XI: Overview. 1. FX market efficiency 2. The art of foreign exchange rate

Glenn Stevens: Capital flows and monetary policy

Sovereign Debt Management, Fiscal Vulnerabilities and Monetary Policy Interaction Alessandro Missale University of Milan

A Chile in Transition: Stability Brings Change. Macroeconomics 556 April 13, Alex Rosaen Neerav Shah Elias Walsh

East Asia s Foreign Exchange Rate Policies

Chapter 19 (8) International Monetary Systems: An Historical Overview

The Mundell-Fleming-Tobin model

Financial liberalisation, exchange rate regime and economic performance in BRICs countries. Hosei University, December 18, 2007

The Case for Price Stability with a Flexible Exchange Rate in the New Neoclassical Synthesis Marvin Goodfriend

59 th UIA CONGRESS Valence / Spain

: Monetary Economics and the European Union. Lecture 8. Instructor: Prof Robert Hill. The Costs and Benefits of Monetary Union II

Canada s Pioneering Experience with a Flexible Exchange Rate in the 1950s: (Hard) Lessons Learned for Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy.

Reform of China's Foreign Exchange Rate System -- How the Newly Adopted Managed Floating System Actually Works

Money and Exchange rates

The Open Economy Revisited: the Exchange-Rate Regime

Asian Financial Crisis. Jianing Li/Wei Ye/Jingyan Zhang 2018/11/29

Chapter 13 The Open Economy Revisited: the Mundell-Fleming Model and the Exchange-Rate Regime

Brief Contents. THE EXTENSIONS Introduction 1 Expectations 283. Policy 433

The Asian Financial Crisis

L9. Choice of the Exchange Rate Regime and the Optimum Currency Area

Inflation Targeting: The Experience of Emerging Markets

MACROECONOMICS. The Open Economy Revisited: the Mundell-Fleming Model and the Exchange-Rate Regime MANKIW N. GREGORY

Stability. Central Bank of Sri Lanka PAMPHLET SERIES NO. 3

9 Right Prices for Interest and Exchange Rates

Exchange Rate and International Finance

4/14/2011. Exchange Rate Policy and Devaluation. The Central Bank Balance Sheet. Central Bank Policy Options in a Crisis

Botswana s exchange rate policy

Commentary on 'Exchange Rate Volatility and Misalignment: Evaluating Some Proposals for Reform'

Lahore University of Management Sciences. MECO 121 Principles of Macroeconomics

Transcription:

Exchange Rate Regimes Lecture 2 LIUC 2011 1 How many exchange rate regimes do we have? Hard pegs or no legal tender (23 countries or %12): No separate legal tender (10 countries) The country adopts a foreign currency as legal tender. Currency boards (13 countries) Intermediate regimes (125 countries or 66%) Other conventional fixed peg arrangements (68 countries) The central bank maintains a fixed exchange rate by intervening in the foreign exchange market and setting interest rates on its facilities. The degree of official commitment to fixed pegs varies across countries. These arrangements are often called soft pegs. 2 Pegged exchange rates with horizontal bands (3 countries) The central bank keeps the exchange rate inside a preannounced band by intervening in the foreign exchange market Crawling pegs (8 countries) The central bank preannounces a periodic rate of depreciation and supports the preannounced path for the exchange rate by intervening in the foreign exchange Crowling band (2 countries) The central bank keeps the exchange rate inside a band that changes periodically by intervening in the foreign exchange market 3 1

Managed floating with no preannounced path for exchange rate (44 countries) The central bank does not commit to any exchange rate target, but smooths out exchange rate fluctuations through intervention in the foreign exchange market. Independent floating (40 countries or 22 %): The central bank refrains from intervening in the foreign exchange market and sets its monetary policy objectives primarily based on domestic considerations. (data source IMF, 31.04.2008, ) http://www.imf.org/external/np/mfd/er/2008/eng/0408.htm 4 What is a currency board (CBA)? A fixed exchange rate is adopted in a law and central bank money (high-powered money) is fully backed by foreign assets. The central bank will only issue local currency against purchases of foreign exchange. Lending to the government by the central bank is prohibited and the amount of support to commercial banks in case of a crisis is usually limited to the excess coverage of high-powered money by foreign assets. 5 Advantages and Disadvantages of Fixed and Flexible ER Advantages of fixed exchange rates 1) providing a nominal anchor to monetary policy 2) encouraging trade and investment 3) precluding competitive depreciation 4) avoiding speculative bubbles Advantages of floating exchange rates 1) giving independence to monetary policy 2) allowing automatic adjustment to trade shocks 3) allowing seignorage 4) avoiding speculative attacks 6 2

Fixed ER:1) nominal anchor to monetary policy A central bank that wants to fight inflation can commit more credibly by fixing the exchange rate Workers, firm managers, and others who set wages and prices then perceive that inflation will be low in the future because the currency peg will prevent the central bank from expanding even if it wanted to. When workers and firm managers have low expectations of inflation, they set their wages and prices accordingly. The result is that the country is able to attain a lower level of inflation for any given level of7 output. Fixed ER:2) encouraging trade and investment ER variability would create uncertainty and would discourage international trade and investment. In the past, skepticism for three reasons Exchange rate variability reflects variability in economic fundamentals. Anyone adversely affected by exchange rate variability can hedge away the risk empirically, it was hard to discern an adverse statistical effect from increased exchange rate volatility on trade. Counterarguments most exchange rate volatility appears to be unrelated to macroeconomic fundamentals. many developing country currencies have no forward markets; Third, more recent econometric studies have found stronger evidence of an effect of exchange rate variability on trade 8 Fixed ER:3) precluding competitive depreciation Argument that goes back to the 30 (1929 crisis) In countries that are interdependent, the depreciation by one country put pressure on the others. E.g. each time one country in East Asia or Latin America devalued, its neighbors were instantly put at a competitive disadvantage, (e.g., from Thailand to the rest of East Asia in 1997, and from Brazil to the rest of South America in 1999). 9 3

Fixed ER:4) avoiding speculative bubbles The final argument for fixed exchange rates is to preclude speculative bubbles of the sort that pushed up the dollar in 1985 or the yen in 1995. According to some economists, the strong appreciation of US$ in 1985 the was not determined by fundamentals, but rather was the outcome of self-confirming market expectations (speculative bubble). Some exchange rate fluctuations appear utterly unrelated to economic fundamentals.therefore, fixing the exchange rate is a way to avoiding the bubbles 10 Flexible ER:1) giving independence to monetary policy i IS LM y 11 Flexible ER:2) allowing automatic adjustment to trade shocks i IS LM y 12 4

Flexible ER:3) allowing seignorage Seignorage Profit made from printing money Seignorage equals the amount of new currency that the monetary authority issues. With a flexible exchange rate, the stock of money in the economy is decided by the authorities; money creation leads to seignorage: M/P 13 How to choose? The impossible trinity of a fixed exchange rate, capital mobility, and a monetary policy dedicated to domestic goals is surely the major part of the explanation for the non-viability of soft pegs. 14 Institutions and ex rate flex. The value of exchange rate flexibility increases, as economies and their institutions mature. Em. markets have stronger links to int. cap. mark. than do other dev. economies; but unlike ad. economies, em. markets face a variety of institutional weaknesses and macroeconomic volatility (higher inflation, problems of debt sustainability, fragile banking systems) which potentially undermine the credibility of policymakers. While the non-emerging market developing economies may gain credibility through pegging heir exchange rates, emerging markets find it harder to do so and could benefit from investing in learning to float. More advanced economies, with their stronger institutions, are best positioned to enjoy the benefits of flexibility without the risk of losing policy credibility. 15 Rogoff et al. Evolution and Performance of Exchange Rate Regimes IMF WP/03/243, Dec 2003. 5