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Title: International Monetary Arrangements


1
International Monetary Arrangements
2
Introduction
  • 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?

3
The 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

4
The 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

5
Gold 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

6
Gold 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

7
Gold 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)

8
Gold 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

9
Macroeconomics 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)

10
Foreign Exchange Market
11
Macroeconomics 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

12
Domestic Economy
13
Macroeconomics 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

14
Gold 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

15
Gold 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

16
Gold 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

17
Bretton 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

18
Bretton 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

19
Bretton 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

20
Bretton 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

21
Bretton 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

22
Bretton 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

23
Bretton 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

24
Bretton 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

25
International 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

26
International 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

27
International 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

28
International 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

29
Demise 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

30
Demise 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

31
Demise 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

32
Post 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

33
Clean 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

34
Clean 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

35
Clean 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

36
Clean 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

37
Pegging 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

38
Pegging 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

39
Pegging 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

40
Pegging 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

41
Pegging 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

42
Pegging 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

43
Pegging 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

44
Pegging 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

45
Options 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

46
Options 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

47
Options 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

48
Options 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)

49
Exchange Rate Map (Fig. 18.1)
50
Exchange 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

51
Exchange 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

52
Exchange Rate Map
  • Current System
  • No rules
  • Each country can pursue their own choices of
    policies
  • Countries are free to target internal balances

53
Exchange 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
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