Title: International Monetary Arrangements
1International Monetary Arrangements
2Introduction
- What were the various international monetary
system that existed from late 1800s to the
present? - How did adjustments to external balances occur
under these systems? - What are the discussions around international
monetary reform?
3The Gold Standard
- Operated from 1870 to 1914
- Each country defined the gold content of its
currency - Could exchange a piece of paper for gold
- Primary function of central bank was to preserve
parity between currency and gold by buying or
selling gold at official parity price - Price of each currency in terms of gold
4The Gold Standard
- Since each currency was known and fixed, exchange
rates between countries were also fixed - Little to no inflation
- Fixed exchange rates gave significant security to
overseas business - Some costs also associated with gold standard
5Gold Standard Monetary Policy
- Countrys monetary base consisted of gold or
currency backed by gold - Any balance of payments imbalance at current
fixed exchange rate would set into motion a
correction process to correct the imbalance
6Gold Standard Monetary Policy
- Balance of payments deficit
- Rest of world accumulates more dollars than
desired - Gold outflows from US to rest of world
- Occurred automatically as dollars become cheaper
in foreign exchange market - Traders could make small profit purchasing gold
at fixed price with cheaper dollars - Exchange rate would be stable in short run
7Gold Standard Monetary Policy
- Long run would not hold without other adjustments
- Outflow of gold causes monetary base to fall or
grow at slower rate - Change in money supply would affect interest rate
and aggregate demand to correct balance of
payments deficit - Opposite is also true (inflow of gold)
8Gold Standard Monetary Policy
- Under current system
- Contractionary money decrease in money supplys
growth rate - Expansionary money increase in money supplys
growth rate - Under gold standard
- Would actually have a decrease or increase in
money supply - Makes domestic economic relatively unstable
- But, fixed exchange rate and long run stable
prices
9Macroeconomics Gold Standard
- Assume economy is expanding
- Higher income in domestic economy leading to
increased level of imports - Higher domestic prices make imports relatively
cheaper - Balance of payments deficit at current fixed
exchange rate - Demand for foreign exchange increases causing
gold to flow out of country (A to B)
10Foreign Exchange Market
11Macroeconomics Gold Standard
- Gold outflow causes countrys money supply to
decrease - Consumption and investment decline as interest
rates increase - Aggregate demand decreases
- Output and price level fall
- Recession in domestic economy in order to bring
external balance back into balance at the fixed
exchange rate
12Domestic Economy
13Macroeconomics Gold Standard
- Decrease in consumption spending leads to
decrease in imports - Domestic goods become relatively cheaper
- Exports increase
- Balance of payments improves
- Outflows of gold decline (eventually to zero)
- Money supply stabilized (stops falling) at lower
level - Domestic economy completes automatic adjustment
14Gold Standard Costs Benefits
- Benefits
- Adjustment of price level and output to an
external imbalance is completely automatic - Country only needs to be willing to buy and sell
gold at stated price - No question what would happen if experience an
external imbalance
15Gold Standard Costs Benefits
- Benefits
- Long run price stability for economy
- Average inflation rate for US during gold
standard was 0.1 percent - Costs
- Does not guarantee short run price stability
- Could have inflation some years and deflation
others - Could vary significantly from year to year
- Deflation as common as inflation
16Gold Standard Costs Benefits
- Costs
- Overall balance of payments position heavily
influences countrys money supply - Balance of payments deficit means contracting
money and contracting economy - Balance of payments surplus means overheated
economy with inflation - With completely fixed exchange rates came
extremely unstable GDP growth rate
17Bretton Woods System
- After gold standard ended, exchange rates were
extremely unstable - Desire for some form of international monetary
system was desirable - Conference in Bretton Woods, NH
- 44 countries met to create a new international
monetary system - Press referred to it as the Bretton Woods System
18Bretton Woods System
- Gold Exchange Standard
- US dollar tied to gold but all other foreign
currencies tied to dollar - Countries agreed to creation of International
Monetary Fund (IMF) - International monetary institution
19Bretton Woods System
- Purpose
- Countries strong desire for a monetary system
with fixed exchange rates - Design a method to decouple the link between
balance of payments and money supply - Necessary to link currencies to something other
than gold
20Bretton Woods System
- Solutions
- Price of gold fixed at 35
- US to maintain fixed price
- US would exchange dollars for gold at stated
price without limitation or restrictions - Other currencies fixed to US dollar
- Meant other currencies fixed in relation to one
another - No longer necessary to sacrifice internal balance
to maintain external balance
21Bretton Woods System
- Faults
- Logically impossible to have balanced balance of
payments in both short and long run - Long run balancing important for sustaining
monetary system - Government had to actively intervene in the
foreign exchange market - Governments would have to buy or sell domestic or
foreign currency to keep domestic currency from
appreciating or depreciating
22Bretton Woods System
- Example
- Country in a recession with balance of payments
deficit - Policies to obtain external and internal balances
did not match - Internal balance requires expansionary monetary
or fiscal policy - Would make external deficit worse
23Bretton Woods System
- Example (cont.)
- Government might choose to fight recession and
sell accumulated foreign exchange to keep
exchange rate fixed - Once domestic economy recovers, can reestablish
external balance - Only if country had sufficient international
reserves could it deal with internal balance
ignoring external balances in short run
24Bretton Woods System
- Example (cont.)
- If country kept pursuing policies that were
inconsistent with external and internal balances,
country might have no choice but to devalue
currency - In this occurred in many countries, then no
longer have a fixed exchange rate - Need mechanism to encourage countries to maintain
policies producing external balance and stable
exchange rates - Mechanism unclear in Bretton Woods system
25International Monetary Fund
- They were to oversee the reconstruction of the
worlds international payments system - Also allowed for creation of a pool of reserved
from which funds could be drawn by countries with
temporary payments imbalances
26International Monetary Fund
- Pool of funds
- Each country in IMF assigned a quota of money to
contribute to pool - One quarter of quota in gold, the rest in that
countrys currency - A country could borrow up to ¼ of its quota at
anytime without restrictions - A country trying to borrow more came with
restrictions
27International Monetary Fund
- IMF restricted borrowing government to pursue
monetary and fiscal policies consistent with long
run external balance - Most borrowing counties carried external deficits
so required tighter policies - Once own reserves were used, country was limited
on pursuing inconsistent policies - IMF loans are short term to be paid back in three
to five years
28International Monetary Fund
- Loans from IMF to countries have problems
- If country has serious imbalances, may be
difficult to correct in short run - Policies to correct imbalances may lead to short
run economic contraction - Cost of lost output may be high
- IMF often involved in solution to country not
performing well IMF not popular
29Demise of Bretton Woods
- Problems developed with Bretton Woods
- Not symmetrical
- A country with balance of payment deficit must
follow policies to fix problem or no new loans - A country with balance of payments surpluses
could not be dealt with - Could not force country to pursue policies to
correct surpluses
30Demise of Bretton Woods
- Problems developed with Bretton Woods
- All currencies fixed to dollar, but US developed
persistent balance of payments deficits - Foreign banks increased holding of dollars
- Surplus countries had to sell domestic currency
for dollars to keep domestic currency from
appreciating - Foreign central banks holding amount of dollars
larger than US stock of gold at 35/ounce
31Demise of Bretton Woods
- End of Bretton Woods
- US faced with choices
- Change macroeconomic policies to reduce or
eliminate external deficit - Have foreign central banks demand gold in
exchange for dollars held - Devalue dollar and let it float against gold and
other currencies - US chose to devalue dollar ending system
32Post Bretton Woods Era
- Two options since breakup of Bretton Woods
- Clean float government essentially leaves
exchange rate alone and lets market determine
value of currency - Fix or peg exchange rate to the currency of
another country or group of countries
33Clean Floats
- Decide internal balances are more important than
external balances - Set monetary and fiscal policy to achieve
acceptable levels of economic growth and
inflation - Resulting mix determines current and capital
account balances - Monetary policy is very effective and fiscal
policy is less so - Leads to exchange rate value inconsistent with PPP
34Clean Floats
- Macroeconomic policy mix could lead to real
appreciation of currency where the economy is
doing well - Might cause significant hardship of tradable
goods portion of economy - Exporters could lose business because of
overvaluation of exchange rate
35Clean Floats
- Policy mix could lead to depreciated exchange
rate - Could lead to boom in tradable goods sectors
- Imports become more expensive
- Countrys goods become cheaper so exports rise
- If at full employment, resources need to come
from somewhere
36Clean Floats
- Policy mix could lead to depreciated exchange
rate (cont.) - Prices and output increase
- Can lead to decreasing prices in non-tradable
goods sector - Letting exchange rate find its own level maybe
optimal, but not costless - Tradeoff is overall internal balance versus
potential hardship for certain parts of the
economy
37Pegging the Exchange Rate
- If international trade is significant portion of
GDP, then ignoring external balances may not be
optimal - Country may wish to peg exchange rate
- Country sets value of nominal exchange rate
against another countrys - Likely to choose a country with whom it trades a
significant amount and/or has large cross border
financial flows
38Pegging the Exchange Rate
- If the pegged rate is credible, it creates
security for investors and traders - However, if currency it is pegged against is
floating, then that currency is still changing - Value against other currencies changes as the
other countrys exchange rate changes
39Pegging the Exchange Rate
- Example Mexico wishes to peg peso to US dollar
- In long run, Mexicos inflation rate must match
that of the US - Mexico must keep domestic real interest rates
similar to those of US to keep capital from
flowing between the countries - Mexico cannot use policies to target internal
balance
40Pegging the Exchange Rate
- Example Mexico wishes to peg peso to US dollar
(cont.) - If conditions in Mexico are similar to US then
fairly costless. - If conditions in Mexico are different from US,
must choose to focus on external or internal (no
peg) balance - Price of pegging currency is willingness to
sometimes sacrifice internal balance to keep
fixed exchange rate
41Pegging the Exchange Rate
- Internal versus external balance choice may be
partially avoided - Fix exchange rate in real terms instead of
nominal terms - In long run real exchange rate is what matters
- Government could periodically change nominal rate
based on changes in inflation between the
countries - Could peg real exchange rate and keep some
control over macroeconomic policies
42Pegging the Exchange Rate
- Fix exchange rate in real terms instead of
nominal terms (cont.) - Still uncertainty in nominal rate
- Governments may target a rate of devaluation to
keep it somewhat constant - Still requires some changes in nominal rates
- Domestic policy may diverge from other country
causing inflation rates to diverge - Generally more certain that free float
43Pegging the Exchange Rate
- Internal versus external balance choice may be
partially avoided - Fix countrys currency to basket of currencies
- If depreciates against one currency in basket, my
appreciate against another - Long run may be more stable than fixing to one
currency
44Pegging the Exchange Rate
- Fix countrys currency to basket of currencies
(cont.) - Problems
- Construction of basket is not clear how many
currencies, which currencies, etc. - Should government tell which currencies are in
the basket? - More difficult for private markets to handle
- Traders exposed to more risk than fixed rate
45Options for Monetary Reform
- Current System Problems
- Businesses dislike floating exchange rates since
volatility increases risk - Can choose between taking risk or protection
through hedging neither of which are costless - Current system forces businesses to implicitly
forecast exchange rates
46Options for Monetary Reform
- Current System Problems
- Floating exchange rates impose externality of
world economy - Varying exchange rates make international trade
and investment riskier - Higher risk and higher costs lead to less of that
activity - Lower total volume of trade and investment with
volatile exchange rates
47Options for Monetary Reform
- Current System Problems
- Governments have similar views as business
- Overvalued currency can hurt tradable goods
sector - Undervalued currency can create a boom that
cannot be sustained - Collapse in currency can cause microeconomic
crisis
48Options for Monetary Reform
- Why not change the system?
- Note figure 18.3
- Horizontal axis shows level of cooperation in
international system - Left set own policies for internal balance
- Right complete cooperation
- Vertical axis shows degree of rules in system
- Top rigid rules
- Bottom much discretion (no agreed upon rules)
49Exchange Rate Map (Fig. 18.1)
50Exchange Rate Map
- Gold Standard
- Rigid rules since each country defined currency
in terms of gold - Significant discretion no need to coordinate
policies - Took monetary policy out of government control
- Other trade policies could be freely set
51Exchange Rate Map
- Bretton Woods System
- More rules but less rigid than gold standard
- Obligations with IMF
- Required more cooperation
- Countries with imbalances had to fix them
- Fixing imbalances often required working with
other countries
52Exchange Rate Map
- Current System
- No rules
- Each country can pursue their own choices of
policies - Countries are free to target internal balances
53Exchange Rate Map
- Why no new system?
- Movement toward more stable exchange rates
requires more rules and/or more cooperation - Moving toward gold standard takes away monetary
policy so unlikely - Increasing cooperation in almost impossible if
there are no rules - Unlikely to move from current system