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

Similar documents
International Finance

Comments of Exchange Rate Management and Crisis Susceptibility: A Reassessment

Figure: EUR-USD Exchange Rate

The International Financial Architecture

Experience of and Lessons from Exchange Rate Regimes in Emerging Economies. Jeffrey A. Frankel Harpel Professor, Harvard University

Monetary policy in emerging markets

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES EXPERIENCE OF AND LESSONS FROM EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES IN EMERGING ECONOMIES. Jeffrey A. Frankel

Exchange Rate Regimes

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

Dollarization. By ALBERTO ALESINA AND ROBERT J. BARRO* MA This research is supported by the National Science Foundation.

Systematic Managed Floating

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

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

The International Monetary System

Peg the Export Price Index: A Proposed Monetary Regime for Small Countries

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

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

Ten Lessons Learned from the Korean Crisis Center for International Development, 11/19/99. Jeffrey A. Frankel, Harpel Professor, Harvard University

The Currency-plus-Commodity Basket Peg: A Proposed Monetary Regime for Commodity-Exporting Countries

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

LECTURE 2: THE TRADE BALANCE IN PRACTICE

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

Lessons for Iceland from the monetary policy of Sweden FREDRIK N G ANDERSSON AND LARS JONUNG, LUND UNIVERSITY SWEDEN

Fear of Floating: Algeria s exchange rate regime

Lecture 6: Intermediate macroeconomics, autumn Lars Calmfors

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

The Effects Of Exchange Rate Regimes On Economic Growth In Egypt Using Error Correction Mode

Lecture 17: Mundell-Fleming model with perfect capital mobility

Exchange Rate Pegging and Inflation:

Progress towards Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Growth. Figure 1: Recovery from Financial Crisis (100 = First Quarter of Real GDP Contraction)

Economics of European Integration Lecture # 9 Monetary Integration I

Introduction The magnitude and gyrations of capital flows becoming the primary determinant of exchange rate movements on a day-to-day basis for most E

MONETARY POLICY FRAMEWORKS AND STRATEGIES

Monetary Policy under Fixed Exchange Rates

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

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

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

Testing the Unstable Middle and Two Corners Hypotheses About Exchange Rate Regimes

Study Questions. Lecture 16 Fixed Versus Floating Exchange Rates

Chapter 18. The International Financial System

Discussion of Jeffrey Frankel s Systematic Managed Floating. by Assaf Razin. The 4th Asian Monetary Policy Forum, Singapore, 26 May, 2017

The Evolution of the International Monetary System. Professor Keith Pilbeam City University, London

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

Developing Countries Chapter 22

Progress Towards Strong, Sustainable, and Balanced Growth. Figure 1: Recovery From Financial Crisis (100 = First Quarter of Real GDP contraction)

Econ 340. Who Uses Fixed and Float. Outline: Fixed versus Floating Exchange Rates. Lecture 16 Fixed versus Floating Exchange Rates

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

These questions may help you prepare for the upcoming final test at 8:00 am on Wednesday, December 17.

Bogdan CĂPRARU Faculty of Economics and Business Administration Alexandru.Ioan Cuza University of Iasi Iasi, Romania

Exchange Rate Policy (*)

Exchange Rate Policy and Regimes

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

The Role of Asian Currencies in the International Monetary System

7/29/2017. Learning Objectives. The International Monetary and Financial Environment. Currencies and Exchange Rates

Study Questions. Lecture 17 European Monetary Unification and the Euro

Capital Inflows and the Exchange Rate Alignments: The Cases of Asian Crisis Countries Prior to the Crisis

Why the Peg is the Best Option for Lebanon?

DOLLARIZATION AND PRICE DYNAMICS. Roberto Vicente Peñaloza Pesantes. Dissertation. Submitted to the Faculty of the

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 17 European Monetary Unification and the Euro

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

Macro for SCS Nov. 29, International Trade & Finance

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

A SIMULTANEOUS-EQUATION MODEL OF THE DETERMINANTS OF THE THAI BAHT/U.S. DOLLAR EXCHANGE RATE

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

Exchange Rate Policy and Monetary Policy Implementation

Exchange Rate Targeting and Currency Boards

Week 1. Currency Systems and Crises

ECO INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MARKETS Winter 2013

To Fix or Not to Fix?

Inflation Targeting: The Experience of Emerging Markets

Suggested Solutions to Problem Set 6

CHAPTER 2 THE EXCHANGE RATE: SHOCK GENERATOR OR SHOCK ABSORBER?

Inflation Targeting in Asia

The Optimal Choice of Exchange Rate Regime for Jordanian Dinar

Inflation targeting as a monetary policy framework

A statistically-based classification of de facto exchange rate regimes

IMPACTS OF THE THREE TRILEMMA POLICIES ON INFLATION, GROWTH AND VOLATILITY FOR TEN SELECTED ASIAN AND PACIFIC COUNTRIES.

Global Business Economics. Mark Crosby SEMBA International Economics

International financial crises

HOW DO MACROECONOMIC AND POLITICAL VARIABLES AFFECT THE FLEXIBILITY OF EXCHANGE RATE REGIME?

How to Value a Swiftcoin

Economics of the European Union

THE MIRAGE OF FLOATING EXCHANGE RATES

Money, Sovereignty, and Monetary Regimes

Discussion of: On the Global Financial Market Integration Swoosh and the Trilemma by Bekaert and Mehl

POLICY BRIEF. Resurgent Capital Flows to Developing Countries: Policies to Improve Their Impact

Exchange Rate and International Finance

Friedman Redux: External Adjustment and Exchange Rate Flexibility

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

Exchange Rate Arrangements in East Asia: Lessons from the Currency Crisis

Suggested Answers. Department of Economics Economics 115 University of California. Berkeley, CA Spring *SAS = See Answer Sheet

Choice of Exchange Rate, Regimes for Developing Countries

Economics 342: International Macroeconomics. Kimberly A. Clausing Fall 2012 Vollum 230

Economics Higher level Paper 2

International Finance and Macroeconomics (Econ 422)

The Open Economy Revisited: the Exchange-Rate Regime

Vitaliy Vandrovych* GSIEF, Brandeis University May 2003 ABSTRACT

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

The Future of the Euro at 15: Rounding the Corners of the Holy Trinity?

The International Monetary System

Transcription:

Lecture 20: Exchange Rate Regimes

What exchange rate regimes do countries choose? 1. Classification of exchange rate regimes What regimes should countries choose? 2. Advantages of fixed rates 3. Advantages of floating rates 4. How should the choice be made? 1. Performance by category 2. Traditional criteria for choosing: OCA framework 3. Further criteria to suit a country for institutionally fixed rate 4. Financial development 5. Commodity price volatility and other trade/supply shocks. Appendices: I. Fashions in international currency policy II. The corners hypothesis III. De facto classification of countries regimes

1. Classification of exchange rate regime Continuum from flexible to rigid FLEXIBLE CORNER 1) Free float 2) Managed float INTERMEDIATE REGIMES 3) Target zone/band 4) Basket peg 5) Crawling peg 6) Adjustable peg FIXED CORNER 7) Currency board 8) Dollarization 9) Monetary union

Trends in distribution of EM exchange rate regimes 1973-1985 Many abandoned fixed exchange rates 1986-94 Exchange rate-based stabilization programs 1990s -- Corners Hypothesis: countries move to either hard peg or free float Since 2001 -- The rise of the managed float category. } Distribution of Exchange Rate Regimes in Emerging Markets, 1980-2011 (percent of total) Ghosh, Ostry & Qureshi, 2014, Exchange Rate Management and Crisis Susceptibility: A Reassessment, IMF.

2. Advantages of fixed rates 1) Encourage trade <= lower exchange risk. In theory, can hedge risk. But costs of hedging: transactions costs, missing markets, and risk premia. Empirical: Exchange rate volatility => trade? Shows up in: - Cross-section evidence, especially small & less developed countries. - Borders, e.g., Canada-US: McCallum-Helliwell (1995-98); Engel-Rogers (1996). - Currency unions: Rose (2000).

Advantages of fixed rates, cont. 2) Encourage investment 3) Provide nominal anchor for monetary policy By anchoring inflation expectations, achieve lower inflation for same Y. But which anchor? Exchange rate target vs. alternatives. 4) Avoid competitive depreciation Currency Wars. 5) Avoid speculative bubbles that can afflict floating.

3. Advantages of floating rates 1) Monetary independence. 2) Automatic adjustment to trade shocks. 3) Central bank retains seignorage. 4) Central bank retains Lender of Last Resort capability, for rescuing banks. 5) Avoiding crashes that hit pegged rates.

4. Which dominate: advantages of fixing or advantages of floating? Empirical studies of performance by category are inconclusive. See Appendix III, last slide. Why? No one exchange rate regime is right for all countries. The answer depends on a country s circumstances. Traditional criteria for choosing: Optimum Currency Area.

Optimum Currency Area (OCA) Broad definition: An optimum currency area is a region (not necessarily coinciding with one country s borders) that should have its own currency & own monetary policy. This definition can be given more content: An OCA can be defined as a region that is neither so small and open that it would be better off linking to the currency of a neighbor, nor so large that it would be better off splitting into sub-regions with different currencies. Professor Jeffrey Frankel

Optimum Currency Area criteria for fixing exchange rate: Small size and openness because then advantages of fixing are large. Symmetry of shocks because then giving up monetary independence is a small loss. Labor mobility because then it is possible to adjust to shocks even without ability to expand money, cut interest rates or devalue. Fiscal transfers in a federal system because then consumption is cushioned in a downturn. Professor Jeffrey Frankel

currency boards New popularity in 1990s of institutionally-fixed corner (e.g., Hong Kong 1983- ; Lithuania 1994-2014; Argentina 1991-2001; Bulgaria 1997- ; Estonia 1992-2011; Bosnia 1998- ; Timor, 2000- ) dollarization (e.g., Panama, El Salvador, Ecuador; or euro-ization: Montenegro) monetary union (e.g., the eurozone, 1999- ).

Currency boards Definition: A currency board is a monetary institution that only issues currency fully backed by foreign assets. Its principal attributes include the following: An exchange rate that is fixed not just by policy, but by law. A reserve requirement stipulating that each dollar s work of domestic currency is backed by a dollar s worth of foreign reserves. A self-correcting balance of payments mechanism, in which a payments deficit automatically contracts the money supply, resulting in a contraction of spending.

1990 s criteria for the firm-fix corner suiting candidates for currency board or union (e.g., Calvo) Regarding credibility: a desperate need to import monetary stability, due to: history of hyperinflation, absence of credible public institutions, location in a dangerous neighborhood, or large exposure to nervous international investors; a desire for integration with a particular neighbor/ trading partner. Regarding other initial conditions : an already-high level of private dollarization high pass-through to import prices access to an adequate level of reserves.

Two additional considerations, particularly relevant to developing countries (i) Level of financial development (ii) Prevalence of real shocks Professor Jeffrey Frankel

(i) Level of financial development Fixed rates are better for countries at low levels of financial development: because markets are thin. When financial markets develop, exchange flexibility becomes more attractive.

(ii) Real Shocks Textbook wisdom regarding the source of shocks: Fixed rates work best if shocks are mostly internal demand shocks (especially monetary); floating rates work best if shocks tend to be real shocks (especially external trade shocks). One case of supply shocks: natural disasters Most common case of real shocks: trade

Terms-of-trade variability Prices of crude oil and other agricultural & mineral commodities hit record highs in 2008, and again in 2011. => Favorable terms of trade shocks for some (Africa, Latin America, & other oil exporters); => Unfavorable terms of trade shock for others (oil importers like Japan, Korea, India, Turkey). Commodity prices fell in 2014-15. A country where trade shocks dominate should accommodate by floating.

End of Lecture 21: Exchange Rate Regimes

Appendix I: Fashions in international currency policy 1980-82: Monetarism (=> target the money supply) 1984-1997: Fixed exchange rates (incl. currency boards) 1993-2001: The corners hypothesis (either firm fix or float) 1998-2007: Inflation Targeting became the new conventional wisdom. 2008-: IT lost some of its attractiveness in the Global Financial Crisis, due to its neglect of asset prices.

Appendix II: The corners hypothesis The claim: Countries can either rigidly peg or freely float, but should abandon intermediate regimes like target zones. Origins: 1992-93 ERM crises -- Eichengreen (1994) Late-1990 s crises in emerging markets

target zone (band) Intermediate regimes Krugman-ERM type (with nominal anchor) Bergsten-Williamson type (FEER adjusted automatically) basket peg (weights can be either transparent or secret) crawling peg pre-announced (e.g., tablita) indexed (to fix real exchange rate) adjustable peg (escape clause, e.g., contingent on terms of trade or reserve loss)

The rise & fall of the Corners Hypothesis It became fashionable in the late 1990s. But: Since Argentina s 2001 crisis forced it to abandon its convertibility plan, currency boards and the corners hypothesis have lost popularity. The intermediate regimes are alive and well. The dominant long-term trend is, rather, toward flexibility.

Appendix III: De facto classification of regimes De jure regime de facto Many countries that say they float, in fact intervene heavily in the foreign exchange market. [1] Many countries that say they fix, in fact devalue when trouble arises. [2] Many countries that say they target a basket of major currencies in fact fiddle with the weights. [3] [1] Fear of floating -- Calvo & Reinhart (2001, 2002); Reinhart (2000). [2] The mirage of fixed exchange rates -- Obstfeld & Rogoff (1995). [3] Parameters kept secret -- Frankel, Schmukler & Servén (2000).

A number of studies have classified countries by de facto exchange rate regimes. But their designations are not highly correlated with each other. Andrew Rose, 2011, "Exchange Rate Regimes in the Modern Era: Fixed, Floating, and Flaky, J. Ec. Literature, Vol. 49, No. 3, Sept., pp. 652-672.

Which exchange rate regimes show higher growth on average? Different classification schemes give different results. Growth Effects of Deviations from Fixed Exchange Rate Regimes IMF classification => crawls do best R&R classification => floats do best LY&S classification => fixed rates do best. Andrew Rose, 2011, "Exchange Rate Regimes in the Modern Era: Fixed, Floating, and Flaky, Journal of Economic Literature, Vol. 49, No. 3, Sept., pp. 652-672. Table 2.