Exchange Rate Arrangements: Various Options - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Exchange Rate Arrangements: Various Options

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Title: Exchange Rate Arrangements: Various Options


1
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Choice before an authority
  • Fixed Exchange Rate System
  • Floating Exchange Rate System

2
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • THE CASE FOR FLOATING EXCHANGE RATES
  • 1. Monetary policy autonomy.
  • If central banks were no longer obliged to
    intervene in currency markets to fix exchange
    rates, authorities would be able to use monetary
    policy to reach internal and external balance.
  • Further, no country would be forced to import
    inflation (or deflation) from abroad.

3
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • 2. Symmetry.
  • Under a system of floating rates the inherent
    asymmetries of Bretton Woods would disappear and
    the United States would no longer be able to set
    world monetary condition all by itself.
  • At the same time, the United States would have
    the same opportunity as other countries to
    influence its exchange rate against foreign
    currencies.

4
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • 3. Exchange rates as automatic stabilizers.
  • Even in the absence of an active monetary policy,
    the swift adjustment of market-determined
    exchange rates would help countries maintain
    internal and external balance in the face of
    changes in aggregate demand.
  • The long and agonizing period of speculation
    preceding exchange rate realignments under the
    Bretton Woods rules would not occur under
    floating.

5
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • THE CASE AGAINST FLOATING EXCHANGE RATES
  • 1. Discipline.
  • Central banks freed from the obligation to fix
    their exchange rates might embark on inflationary
    policies.
  • In other words, the "discipline" imposed on
    individual countries by a fixed rate would be
    lost.

6
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • 2. Destabilizing speculation and money market
    disturbances.
  • Speculation on changes in exchange rates could
    lead to instability in foreign exchange markets,
    and this instability, in turn, might have
    negative effects on countries' internal and
    external balances.
  • Further, disturbances to the home money market
    could be more disruptive under floating than
    under a fixed rate.

7
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • 3. Injury to international trade and investment.
  • Floating rates would make relative international
    prices more unpredictable and thus injure
    international trade and investment.

8
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • 4. Uncoordinated economic policies.
  • If the Bretton Woods rules on exchange rate
    adjustment were abandoned, the door would be
    opened to competitive currency practices harmful
    to the world economy.
  • As happened during the interwar years, countries
    might adopt policies without considering their
    possible beggar-thy-neighbor aspects.
  • All countries would suffer as a result.

9
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • 5. The illusion of greater autonomy.
  • Floating exchange rates would not really give
    countries more policy autonomy.
  • Changes in exchange rates would have such
    pervasive macroeconomic effects that central
    banks would feel compelled to intervene heavily
    in foreign exchange markets even without a formal
    commitment to peg.
  • Thus, floating would increase the uncertainty in
    the economy without really giving macroeconomic
    policy greater freedom.

10
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Various Alternatives Available Under Floating
    Exchange Rate System
  • Free Float
  • Dirty Float
  • Floating Within A Band
  • Sliding Band
  • Crawling Band
  • Crawling Peg
  • Fixed but Adjustable
  • Currency Board
  • Dollarization

11
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Free Float
  • Value of foreign exchange freely determined in
    the market.
  • Actual and expected changes in demand/ supply of
    assets and goods reflected in exchange rate
    changes

12
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Dirty Float
  • Sporadic central bank interventions in foreign
    exchange markets.
  • Modes and frequency of intervention vary as do
    the objectives guiding the interventions.
  • Active interventions results in changes in
    international reserves.
  • Indirect interventions (through changes in
    interest rates, liquidity and other financial
    instruments) does not result in changes in
    reserves

13
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Floating Within A Band
  • The exchange rate is allowed to fluctuate within
    a band.
  • The center of the band is a fixed rate, either
    in terms of one currency or of a basket of
    currencies.
  • The width of the band varies.
  • Some band systems are the result of cooperative
    arrangements, other are unilateral
  • Example
  • (The Vietnam government announced a raft of
    plans, including widening the currency trading
    band, to help counter the nations fastest
    inflation in more than 12 years. It plans to
    widen the currencys trading band against the
    dollar to 2, up from the current 0.75. (7 March
    2008))

14
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Sliding Band
  • There is no commitment by the authorities to
    maintain the central parity "indefinitely" .
  • Instead it is clear at the outset that the
    central parity will be adjusted periodically
    (e.g. due to competitiveness considerations)
  • The system is an adaptation of the band regime to
    the case of high inflation economies.

15
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Crawling Band
  • A band system whereby the central parity crawls
    overtime.
  • Different rules can be used to determine the rate
    of crawl.
  • The two most common are backward looking crawl
    (e.g. based on past inflation differential ) and
  • forward looking crawl (e.g. based on the expected
    or target, rate of inflation)

16
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Crawling Peg
  • The normal exchange rate is adjusted periodically
    according to a set of indicator (usually lagged
    inflation differentials) and is not allowed the
    alternate beyond a narrow range (say two percent)
  • One variant of the system consists of adjusting
    the nominal rate by a pre-announced rate set
    deliberately below ongoing inflation.

17
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Fixed but Adjustable
  • The regime epitomized by the Bretton Woods
    System.
  • The exchange rate is fixed but the central bank
    is not obliged to maintain the parity
    indefinitely.
  • No tight constraints are imposed on the monetary
    and fiscal authorities regarding policies that
    are inconsistent with preserving the parity.
  • Adjustments of the parity (devaluation) are a
    powerful policy instrument

18
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Currency Board
  • Fixed exchange rate system with institutional
    (legal and even constitutional) constraints on
    monetary policy and no scope for altering the
    parity.
  • The monetary authority can issue domestic money
    only when it is fully backed by inflows of
    foreign exchange

19
Exchange Rate Arrangements Various Options
  • Dollarization
  • Generic name given to and extreme form of a
    currency board system where the country gives up
    completely its monetary autonomy by adopting
    another countries currency
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