Title: International Monetary System
1International Monetary System
- International Corporate Finance
- P.V. Viswanath
2Learning Objectives
- Alternative Exchange Rate Systems
- Equilibrium under different exchange rate systems
- Categories of Central Bank Intervention
3Alternative Exchange Rate Systems Free Float
- In a free market, exchange rates are determined
by the interaction of currency supplies and
demands. - Supply and demand schedules are influenced by
price level changes, interest differentials and
economic growth. - In a free float, as these economic parameters
change, market participants will adjust their
current and expected future currency needs.
These adjustments will lead to changing exchange
rates.
4Free Float
5Managed/Dirty Float
- Three types of central bank intervention
- Smoothing out daily fluctuations something akin
to a specialist on the NYSE. - Leaning against the wind maintaining an
exchange rate against temporary irrational
values. - Unofficial pegging attempt to manipulate
fundamental exchange rates without public
announcements
6Other Exchange Rate Systems
- Target Zone Arrangement countries adjust their
national economic policies to maintain their
exchange rates within a specific margin around
agreed-upon, fixed central exchange rates.
Example European Monetary System. - Fixed-Rate System Governments are committed to
maintaining target exchange rates. All
participants must, effectively, have the same
monetary policy else, equilibrium rates would
shift. Example Bretton Woods.
7Classical Gold Standard
- Countries on the Gold Standard agree to maintain
convertibility of their currency into gold. - This ensures predictability of exchange rates
- Gold is a durable, storable, portable, easily
recognized, divisible commodity. Short-run
changes in its stock are limited by high
production costs hence it is difficult for
governments to manipulate its value. - Its value as a commodity, relative to other
commodities taken as a whole is relative stable.
8Gold Standard
- Great Britain maintained a fixed price of gold
from 1821 to 1914 at 4.2474 an ounce. - The US maintained the price of gold at 20.67 an
ounce from 1834-1933 (except 1861-1878). - This led to long-run price stability as well as
international trade, facilitated by exchange rate
stability. - However, governments monetary policy is forced
by changes in the supply of gold e.g., greater
exports lead to greater inflows of gold, which,
in turn, imply a larger money supply and ensuing
inflation.
9How the Gold Standard Works
Suppose higher productivity in the non-gold
producing sector of the US lowers the prices of
other goods relative to gold and the US price
level declines.
Prices are equal again, but probably at a lower
level than before.
10Post-Gold Standard
- The Gold-Exchange Standard operated from
1925-1931 the US and England could hold only
gold reserves, but other nations could hold both
gold and dollars or pounds as reserves. In 1931,
England suffered due to massive capital flows and
devalued the pound. - Other countries devalued competitively. This led
to a trade war. Protectionist exchange rate
policies fueled the global depression of the
1930s.
11Bretton Woods
- The Bretton Woods Agreement was implemented in
1946. Each government agreed to maintain a
pegged exchange rate for its currency vis-à-vis
the dollar or gold (35/oz.). The exchange rate
could fluctuate only within 1 of its stated par
value. - The fixed rates were maintained by official
intervention in foreign exchange markets. - However, in practice, governments were unwilling
to suffer the political costs of such
intervention. - The lack of US monetary discipline due to the
Vietnam war made it difficult for the US to
maintain the official 35/oz. gold price. - W. Germany, Japan and Switzerland refused to
accept the inflation that a fixed exchange rate
would have forced on them. - The dollar therefore depreciated rapidly.
Subsequently, rates have, more or less, floated.
12Assessment of Floating-Rate System
- Currency Volatility has increased this is partly
due to real shocks, such as changing oil prices
and shifting competitiveness among countries. - However, not only nominal exchange rate
volatility, but also real exchange rate
volatility has increased. Hence there have been
calls for a return to fixed rates. - Currency stability with fixed rates requires that
markets believe that countries will act to keep
the currency stable this requires a willingness
to accept coordinated monetary policies. - Countries are not willing to accept the political
price of such subordination. A monetary union is
an alternative to fixed rates. - Under monetary union, individual countries
replace their local currencies with a common
currency. For example, in the United States, all
50 states share the same dollar.
13Europe and the EMS
- Europe started out in March 1979 with the
European Monetary System (EMS), which is an
example of a target zone arrangement. - The heart of the EMS was an exchange rate
mechanism. Each member of the EMS agreed on a
central exchange rate for its currency in terms
of the ECU (European Currency Unit). Members
were required to support the agreed upon exchange
rates. - However, due to widely differing economic
policies, the EMS did not last. The EMS was
abandoned in 1993.
14European Monetary Union
- On January 1, 1999, the 11 founding members of
the EMU surrendered their monetary autonomy to
the new European Central Bank and gave up their
right to create money. Only the ECB can create
money. - However, governments can issue their own
euro-denominated bonds, just as individual
American states can issue bonds. - Individual countries in the EMU can attract
investors only by convincing them that they have
the financial ability through taxes and other
revenues to generate the euros to repay the debt. - An important advantage of the EMU was the ability
of member countries to use the requirements of
the monetary union to rein in the expensive
welfare state and its costly regulations.
15Advantages of a Common Currency
- Greater convenience for travelers from one part
of the common currency area to another - Eliminates the risk of currency fluctuations and
facilitates cross-border price comparisons - Lower risk and improved price transparency
encourages the flow of trade and investments
among member countries. - This allows greater integration of the regions
capital, labor and commodity markets and a more
efficient allocation of resources within the
region. - Increased trade and price transparency will spur
area-wide competition in goods and services and
encourage corporate restructurings and mergers
and acquisitions.
16Disadvantages of a Common Currency
- Monetary policy could not be used to affect
relative prices of domestic goods versus foreign
goods. - For example, if there were a decrease in demand
for French goods, France could increase local
money and allow the franc to depreciate. This
would increase demand for French goods. - However, in a monetary union, this is not
possible. This would only be achieved through
reduced demand for French goods leading to
unemployment, which would then enable French
manufacturers to reduce wages, allowing French
goods to be once again competitive. - The social and economic costs of this process
could be high.
17Emerging Market Crises
- In the 1990s, there were several emerging market
currency crises in fixed exchange rate countries
the Mexican crisis in 1994/5, the Asian crisis
in 1997, the Russian crisis in 1998, and the
Brazilian crisis in 1998/9. - There are two different transmission mechanisms
for currency crises - Trade links from one emerging market to another
through their trade links e.g. when Argentina is
in crisis, it imports less from Brazil, its
principal trading partner. As Brazil contracts,
its currency will likely weaken. - Financial system trouble in one market leads to
investors seeking to exit other countries with
similar risky characteristics. Investors may
become more risk averse and rebalance their
portfolios by selling off other risky assets.
18Dealing with Emerging Market Crises
- Currency Controls abandoning free capital
movement, as in the case of Malaysia. - Freely Floating Currency Australia and New
Zealand were protected against the Asian crises
because they had floating exchange rates. - Permanently fixed exchange rates dollarization,
currency boards or monetary union.