Title: Fixed Exchange Rates vs. Floating Exchange Rates
1Fixed Exchange Ratesvs.Floating Exchange Rates
Global Trade Finance Phil Bryson
2Exchange Rate Regimes
- What are fixed Exchange Rates?
- - Officials commit to maintaining the exchange
rate at a specific level.
3Exchange Rate Regimes
- What are Floating Exchange Rates?
- - No intervention from bankers or government
officials. The market determines the price of
the currency. -
4Exchange Rate Regimes
- What is a clean float? A dirty one?
- - With a dirty float the government doesnt peg
the currency, but tries from time to time to
influence the rate by buying or selling in the
currency markets.
5Fixed Exchange Rates
- How can the government keep a currency at a
certain value if international commerce becomes
unwilling to pay that price? - It cant maintain the value for long. If the
demand for the currency falls, its price would
fall as well. -
6Fixed Exchange Rates
- The only way the price can be kept up is for the
government promising to maintain the original
level to enter the foreign exchange market and
bid the price of the currency back up by
purchasing it. -
7Fixed Exchange Rates
- The government must buy the amount that will
bring the quantity demanded back to the original
level. -
Price of Franc
Supply of Francs
Demand for Francs
Quantity of exchange
8Fixed Exchange Rates
- To what does the government fix the value of its
currency? - When or how often does the country change the
value of its fixed rate?
9Fixed Exchange Rates
- How does the government defend the fixed value
against any market pressures pushing toward
higher or lower exchange rate value?
10Fix to what?
- In the past, all currencies were fixed to gold.
- Today, a country can fix its value to another
countrys currency.
11Fix to what?
- A country can fix its currency to a basket of
other currencies. - -Same as diversifying a portfolio (Not putting
all your eggs in one basket) - -Special Drawing Right (SDR)A basket of four
major world currencies.
12Defending a Fixed Exchange Rate
- To buy or sell foreign currencies (in order to
influence the prevailing exchange rate), a
government must have foreign exchange reserves. - It is not likely to have enough reserves to
defend against a massive and sustained attack on
the currency. What is an attack on a countrys
currency? - (Answer Massive selling off of a currency
expected to be devalued. One can borrow the
attacked currency and pay it back after
devaluation.)
13Defending a Fixed Exchange Rate
- How can higher i rates keep the currency value
up? - (Answer Foreigners will purchase the nations
currency, bidding its value upward, to make
short-term investments in the country.)
14Defending a Fixed Exchange Rate
- The government can also make long-term
adjustments of its macroeconomic (monetary and/or
fiscal policy). - Budget austerity avoids inflation and takes
downward pressure off currency.
15Defending a Fixed Exchange Rate
- Why does inflation put downward pressure on a
countrys exchange rate? - Non-inflating countries are unwilling to pay more
and more to buy an inflating countrys goods and
services. Reduced demand for the inflating
currency will make it depreciate.
16Defending a Fixed Exchange Rate
- Why does inflation put downward pressure on a
countrys exchange rate? - Citizens of the inflating country will want to
seek bargains through imports, selling their
currency to obtain other currencies. Selling
increases the supply and drives the price down
further.
17Defending The Peso Under Attack
- Assume the Peso has been inflating in Mexico
- Downward pressure will be on the peso. (Less
demand for it, since fewer will be purchased with
Mexican prices going up.)
18Defending The Peso Under Attack
- The Mexican government intervenes in currency
markets, purchasing pesos to maintain their value
and promises it will never permit its value to
fall.
19Defending The Peso Under Attack
- The attack will be under way if people dont
believe the promise. People sell their pesos for
dollars, etc., while the price is still up. Note
borrow money in Mexico, change it quickly for
dollars. Pay back the loan later with cheap pesos.
20Defending The Peso Under Attack
- The Mexican government soon runs out of reserves
and lets the peso price fall. - People purchase pesos back at the new, lower rate
for good gains.
21When to Change the Rate?
- Why might a government want to change the
exchange value of its currency? - It might do so in order to promote, for example,
greater export volume.
22When to Change the Rate?
- What is a pegged exchange rate?
- The term pegged exchange rate refers to setting a
targeted value for a countrys foreign exchange,
and it indicates the govt. has some ability to
move the peg.
23When to Change the Rate?
- Governments attempt to keep the value fixed for
relatively long periods of time to reduce trade
uncertainties. - What is an adjustable peg?
- The government may change the pegged rate if a
substantial disequilibrium in the countrys
international position develops (e.g., demand for
the currency is too weak to maintain the desired
value).
24When to Change the Rate?
- A crawling peg can be changed often (monthly,
say) according to a set of indicators or the
judgment of the countrys monetary authority. - Indicators
- The difference of inflation rates
- International reserve assets
- Growth of the money supply
- The current actual market exchange rate relative
to the central par value of the pegged rate
25The Floating Exchange Rate
- Clean Float
- Supply and Demand are solely private activities
- Complete flexibility
26The Floating Exchange Rate
- Dirty Float (Managed Float)
- From time to time, the government tries to impact
the rate through intervention - More popular than clean float
- Effectiveness of intervention is controversial
27Monetary Policy with Fixed Exchange Rates
Expanding the Money Supply Worsens the Balance of
Payments
Capital flows out.
(in the short run)
To improve a poor macroeconomic situation, a
country increases its money supply so that banks
are more willing to lend.
The overall payments balance worsens.
Interest rate drops
The Current account balance worsens as exports
fall and imports increase.
Real spending, production, and income rise, but
The price level increases.
28Monetary Policy with Floating Exchange Rates
Effects of Expanding the Money
Supply
Capital flows out.
(In the short run)
Currency depreciation and automatic adjustment
begins!
The Current account balance improves
Real product and income rise more
Interest rate drops
With an increase in the money supply, banks are
more willing to lend.
Real spending, production, and income rise.
Current account balance worsens.
The Price level increases.
(Beyond the short run)
29In Conclusion
- Fixed exchange rates are government controlled.
- Floating exchange rates are market driven.
30In Conclusion
- Governments have always preferred the improved
business climate of fixed rates - They reduce the uncertainty of unstable currency
values (note the European Monetary Systems fixed
rates of the 1990s).
31In Conclusion
- But as financial markets have developed to
accommodate for flexible exchange rates, more and
more countries have come to appreciate the value
of market determination.
32Readings Addendum
- The reading by Peter b. Kenen, fixed versus
Floating Exchange Rates is probably expressive
of a majority of economists. - Once, during the era of the Bretton Woods System,
many feared floating rates. Their uncertainty
would hinder international trade
33Kenen on Fixed and Floating Rates
- Times have changed since the early 1970s and
Nixons destruction of Bretton Woods. Markets
have developed to hedge exchange risks and we
have become accustomed to the uncertainties
associated with them. Trade flourishes.
34Kenen on Fixed and Floating Rates
- Fixing the exchange rate deprives a government of
two very valuable policy instruments, the nominal
exchange rate and monetary policy, and it may
therefore be tempted to adopt beggar-thy-neighbor
trade policies to cope with output-reducing
shocks.
35Kenen on Fixed and Floating Rates
- Fixing the exchange rate may help stabilize a
country that has suffered extensively with
inflation. trade policies to cope with
output-reducing shocks. - The commitment to a pegged exchange rate is
implicitly a commitment to monetary and fiscal
stability, without which a fixed rate cannot
survive. Pegging can buy credibility.
36Kenen on Fixed and Floating Rates
- When asymmetric economic shocks trouble nations,
some cannot cope without changing their exchange
rates. It is neither wise nor realistic to
advocate world-wide pegging.
37Richard N. Cooper on Exchange Rate Choices
- Many countries have gone to the float for their
exchange rates, but many still decide to peg
their currency or fix their exchange rate. The
choice is probably the most important
macro-economic policy decision a country makes.
38Richard N. Cooper on Exchange Rate Choices
- Cooper reviews the international monetary
experience among the major countries, reviewing
the reasons why floating rates were long viewed
with suspicion. - He discusses the Friedman/Johnson case for
flexible rates made in the sixties and seventies.
Johnson thought the developing countries would
continue to peg their rates.
39Richard N. Cooper on Exchange Rate Choices
- Cooper reviews the potential pitfalls for
developing countries when international
institutions insist that they both move to
greater exchange rate flexibility and to
liberalize international capital movements at the
same time.
40Richard N. Cooper on Exchange Rate Choices
- Flexible exchange rates have worked very well for
the leading industrial countries. It will be
interesting to see how Europe fares with
absolutely fixed exchange rates among EU members
(via the Euro) and how the Euro/U.S. Dollar
relationship develops.
41Richard N. Cooper on Exchange Rate Choices
- Were still learning, but movements in exchange
rates provide a useful shock absorber for real
disturbances to the world economy, but they are
also a significant source of uncertainty for
trade and capital formation, the wellsprings of
economic process.