Title: Lecture 21: Exchange Rate Regimes
1 Lecture 21 Exchange Rate Regimes
2- What are countries doing?
- Classification of exchange rate regimes
- De jure vs. De facto
- What should countries be doing?
- Advantages of fixed rates
- Advantages of floating rates
- How should the choice be made?
- Performance by category
- Traditional criteria for choosing OCA framework
- 1990s criteria to suit a country for
institutionally fixed rate - Financial development
- External shocks Commodity price volatility.
- Addenda Attempts to classify countries
regimes, performance - The corners hypothesis
31. Classification of exchange rate
regimeContinuum 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
4Intermediate regimes
- target zone (band)
- 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)
5 2. De jure regime ? de facto as is by now
well-known
- 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).
6 3. Advantages of fixed rates
- Encourage trade lt lower exchange risk.
- In theory, can hedge risk. But costs of
hedging - missing markets, transactions costs, and risk
premia. - Empirical Exchange rate volatility ? gt trade
? ? - Time-series evidence showed little effect. But
more 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).
Professor Jeffrey Frankel
7Advantages of fixed rates, cont.
- 2) Encourage investment
- lt cut currency premium out of interest rates
- 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
- 5) Avoid speculative bubbles that afflict
floating. - (If variability were all from fundamental real
exchange rate risk, and no bubbles, then fixing
the nominal exchange rate would mean it would
just pop up in prices instead.)
8 4. Advantages of floating rates
- Monetary independence
- Automatic adjustment to trade shocks
- Central bank retains seignorage
- Central bank retains Lender of Last Resort
capability, for rescuing banks - Avoiding crashes that hit pegged rates,
- particularly if origin of speculative attacks
is multiple equilibria, not fundamentals.
9 5. Which dominate advantages of fixing or
advantages of floating?Performance by category
is inconclusive.
- To over-simplify 3 important studies (see
Addendum I) - Ghosh, Gulde Wolf hard pegs work best
- Sturzenegger Levy-Yeyati floats are best
- Reinhart-Rogoff limited flexibility performs
best - Why the different answers?
- The de facto schemes do not correspond to each
other. - A countrys circumstances determine the
appropriate regime.
10 Which dominate advantages of fixing or
advantages of floating? Answer depends on
circumstances No one exchange rate regime is
rightfor all countries or all times.
- Traditional criteria for choosing - Optimum
Currency Area. Focus is on trade and
stabilization of business cycle. - 1990s criteria for choosing Focus is on
financial markets and stabilization of
speculation.
11 Optimum Currency Area Theory (OCA) Broad
definition An optimum currency area is a region
that should have its own currency and 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 pegging its currency to a neighbor,
nor so large that it would be better off
splitting into sub-regions with different
currencies
Professor Jeffrey Frankel
12Optimum 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
13New popularity in 1990s ofinstitutionally-fixed
corner
- currency boards
- (e.g., Hong Kong, 1983- Lithuania, 1994-
- Argentina, 1991-2001 Bulgaria, 1997-
- Estonia 1992- Bosnia, 1998- )
- dollarization
- (e.g, Panama, El Salvador, Ecuador
- or euro-ization Montenegro)
- monetary union
- (e.g., EMU, 1999)
14Currency boards
- Definition A currency board is a monetary
institution that only issues currency that is
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
dollars work of domestic currency is backed by a
dollars 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.
151990s criteria for the firm-fix corner
suiting candidates for currency boards 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 close integration with a
particular neighbor or 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
- the rule of law.
16Two additional considerations, particularly
relevant to developing countries
- (i) Level of financial development
- (ii) Supply shocks, especially
- External terms of trade shocks and
the proposal for Product Price
Targeting
PPT
Professor Jeffrey Frankel
17(i) Level of financial development Aghion,
Bacchetta, Ranciere Rogoff (2005)
- 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.
18(ii) External Shocks
- An old 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 terms of
trade). - One case of supply shocks natural disasters
- R.Ramcharan (2007) finds support.
- Most common case of real shocks trade
Professor Jeffrey Frankel
19Terms-of-trade variability returns
- Prices of crude oil and other agricultural
mineral commodities hit record highs in 2008, and
again in 2011. - gt Favorable terms of trade shocks for some
(oil producers, Africa, Chile, etc.) - gt Unfavorable terms of trade shock for others
(oil importers like Japan, Korea). - Textbook theory says a country where trade shocks
dominate should accommodate by floating.
20Fashions in international currency policy
- 1980-82 Monetarism (target the money
supply) - 1984-1997 Fixed exchange rates (incl.
currency boards) - 1993-2001 The corners hypothesis
- 1998-2007 Inflation targeting ( currency
float) - became the new conventional wisdom.
- 2008-09 IT lost some of its attractiveness in
the Global Financial Crisis, due to its neglect
of asset prices.
IT
Professor Jeffrey Frankel
21Addendum ISchemes for de facto classification
- have been divided into two categories, by Tavlas,
Dellas Stockman (2008), - mixed de jure-de facto classifications, because
the self-declared regimes are adjusted by the
devisers for anomalies. - Vs. pure de facto classifications
becauseassignment of regimes is based solely on
statistical algorithms.
22IMF classification
- Of 185 Fund members,
- Have given up own currencies
- Euro-zone
- CFA Franc Zone
- E.Caribbean CA
- dollarized
- Currency boards
- Intermediate regimes
- pegs to a single currency
- pegs to a composite
- crawling pegs
- horizontal bands
- crawling bands
- managed floats
- independent floaters
- (end-2004 de facto)
- 41
- 12 14
- 6
- 9
7 - 104
- 33
- 8
- 6
- 5
- 1
- 51
- 35
23Adjusted de jure classification schemes
- Ghosh, Gulde, Ostry Wolf (1995) identify
peggers who in fact devalue often. - Bubula Otker-Robe (2002) adjust by consulting
IMF economists. - Reinhart Rogoff (2003, 04) add category of
free falling.
24De facto classification schemes
- Shambaugh (2004) variability of exchange rate.
- Levy-Yeyati Sturzenegger (2005) cluster
analysis based on variability of ? exchange rates
vs. variability of ? reserves - Implicit basket weights method regress ?value
of local currency against ? values of major
currencies. Frankel Wei (1993, 2007),
Bénassy-Quéré (1999), B-Q et al (2004). - Close fit gt a peg.
- Coefficient of 1 on gt peg.
- Or other currencies gt basket peg.
25The de facto schemes do not agree
- That de facto schemes to classify exchange rate
regimes differ from the IMFs previous de jure
classification is by now well-known. - It is less well-known that the de facto schemes
also do not agree with each other !
26Correlations Among Regime Classification Schemes
- Sample 47 countries. From Frankel, Experience
of and Lessons from Exchange Rate Regimes in
Emerging Economies, ADB, 2004. Table 3,
prepared by Marina Halac Sergio Schmukler.
27 Three studies of how well exchange rate regimes
perform give different answers.
28Addendum II The corners hypothesis
- The claim
- Countries can rigidly peg or freely float, but
should abandon intermediate
regimes like target zones. - Origins
- 1992-93 ERM crises -- Eichengreen (1994)
- Late-1990s crises in emerging markets
- 1994 Mexico
- 1997 Thailand, Korea
- 1998 Russia Brazil
- 2001 Turkey
29The rise fall of the Corners Hypothesis
- It became fashionable in the late 1990s
- But
- Since Argentinas 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.
30What is the rationale for the corners hypothesis?
- The Impossible Trinity? (Fischer,
2001) - No Intermediate regimes are theoretically
compatible with high capital mobility. - Procrastination? Governments politically
postpone exit. - (Mexico 1994 Thailand 1997) gt bad outcomes.
(Willett, 2006) - Moral hazard of forex reserves? (Dooley)But
high reserves, empirically, reduce speculative
attacks.
31Possible rationales for the corners hypothesis,
cont.
- To discourage mismatch (unhedged liabilities,
Hausmanns original sin), even if it reduces
capital inflow? (Eichengreen) - Perhaps floating can shift debt-denomination to
local currency, producing the good equilibrium
after all (no currency mis-match). - Since 2003, it seems to have worked more
emerging market recipients of large inflows this
decade now have floating exchange rates and
local-denominated debt. - The exceptions, like Hungary, got into big
trouble in 2008
32- Or perhaps the grass always looks greener
in the corners of the pasture.
- The pendulum has swung back
- Especially after failure of Argentinas currency
board (okay, convertibility plan) 2001
collapse - Surely an intermediate regime (BBC) is the right
answer for China now.
33Bottom line on corners hypothesis
- Dont cling to overvalued pegs.
- But dont blame the exchange rate regime for
symptoms of other problems.