International Monetary Systems. July 2011

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Transcription:

International Monetary Systems July 2011

Issues What determines the nominal exchange rate between two fiat monies? What is the optimal monetary system? separate currencies with floating exchange rates separate currencies with fixed exchange rates currency union Practical problems with fixed exchange rates and monetary unions

Excess volatility?

A simple OLG model Two-period-lived agents, young endowed with nonstorable and care only for consumption when old ( +1 ) People are distributed across two regions (countries), labeled and ; people and goods are identical across countries Governments in each country manage their own monies, and ;new money is use for government finance Let denote populations of young at date

Foreign currency controls There is free trade in goods (e.g., the old of country may purchase goods from the young of country and vice-versa) therealexchangerateisfixed at unity (goods are the same across countries) Citizens are not permitted to carry foreign money from one period to the next the young who sell to foreigners must therefore dispose of accumulated foreign money on FX market (the young of different nationalities end up swapping currencies)

The effect of this regime is to render national currencies as imperfect substitutes (in extreme form here) Let denote the value of currency measured in units of output In this model, the young end up carrying units of real money balances The currency regime forces this quantity to be in the form of the national currency Therefore, market clearing conditions are = for =

The nominal exchange rate must satisfy the no-arbitrage-condition = (law of one price) Consequently, we have = = Or, in terms of growth rates +1 = Nominal exchange rate (and dynamics) depend on relative fundamentals

FixingtheexchangerateunderFCC Suppose that country wants to unilaterally fix its exchange rate against country to = Our theory implies that there exists a monetary policy that achieves this goal Ã! = Among other things, this policy implies that domestic monetary policy must follow foreign monetary policy

Nominal exchange rate indeterminancy You are playing poker with poker chips that are colored blue, white, and red what determine the exchange rate between chips of different colors? How can market forces be guaranteed to price the exchange rate between two intrinisically useless objects correctly? What determines the exchange rate between Canadian greens and purples? ($20 and $10 bills)

No portfolio restrictions Absent currency controls, there is no reason for currencies not to be treated as perfect substitutes here (assume this is so) Individual demands for real money balances are still equal to but now money balances can consist of either currency The relevant market-clearing condition is now given by + = h + i LHS is world supply of money, RHS is world demand for money

Use = to rewrite condition above as h + i = h + i We lose one restriction two equations, one unknown (an infinite number of combinations consistent with maximizing behavior and marketclearing) Manuelli and Peck (IER, 1990) show that only restriction on equilibrium exchange rate is that it follows a Martingale; i.e., +1 = fixed exchange rate is an example

International currency traders Seems like a stretch to imagine that everyone views competing currencies as perfect substitutes But the result continues to hold even if only a subset of agents treats two currencies as perfect substitutes e.g., international currency traders dealing in major currencies Modify the model above àlaking, Wallace and Weber (JIE, 1992) Assume that citizens of country and deal in their national currencies only (perhaps because of FCC)

Introduce a third set of agents, type whobelongtoneithercountryand who view the two currencies as perfect substitutes Let 0 1 denote fraction of money held as country money by type agents Market-clearing conditions are now given by = + = + (1 ) Or... = " + + (1 ) #

Again, there are no fundamentals pinning down portfolio holdings of type agents Now, imagine that type are risk-neutral and that type and are riskaverse There are stochastic rational expectations equilibria where the nominal exchange rate follows a bounded martingale, even with constant fundamentals Nominal exchange rate is driven entirely by speculation Welfare losses accrue to agents of country and

Fixing the exchange rate Cooperative stabilization: both countries commit to exchanging currencies at stipulated rate e.g., no one questions the exchange rate between Queens and Lauriers Unilateral peg: single country commits to exchanging currencies at stipulated rate if commitment is shaky, may open door to a speculative attack Currency union: adopt a single currency (another version: dollarizationadopt a major foreign currency)

Inflationary incentives under fixed exchange rates Suppose countries and agree to fix the exchange rate at Imagine the country holds its money supply fixed, while country grows its money supply at rate h + i = h + i Value of country money falls over time...but so does value of country money! (Country exports its inflationary policy to country )

Coordinated fiscal policies and monetary policy independence Countries have an incentive to overinflate under fixed exchange rate regimes Similar free riding issues can arise in monetary unions E.g., member country issues high levels of debt that is then held widely in portfolios of other member countries (Greece?) Imagine than default suddenly becomes necessary The only question is how to default (may be pressure on monetary authority to monetize debt)