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Determinants of Exchange Rates. Why Study Exchange Rates?  To understand the economic environment –Forecasting for planning purposes  To understand.

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Presentation on theme: "Determinants of Exchange Rates. Why Study Exchange Rates?  To understand the economic environment –Forecasting for planning purposes  To understand."— Presentation transcript:

1 Determinants of Exchange Rates

2 Why Study Exchange Rates?  To understand the economic environment –Forecasting for planning purposes  To understand exposure to currency risk –Financial impact of exchange rate move varies With the nature of the asset/liability With the cause of the move

3 Outline: Exchange Rate Determination 1. Market Forces 1.Real economic effects 2.Monetary effects 2. Role of Government

4 Exchange rates are determined by supply and demand for the currencies

5 Market Forces: Real Effects

6 To focus on real effects assume: 1. No currency market intervention 2. No inflation in either country

7 Real exchange rates are determined by real economic events affecting supply and demand for the currencies

8 Current Event “Good News Boosts Dollar,Good News Boosts Dollar, for a Changefor a Change”

9 Balance of Payment Accounts Components:  Current Account - Goods and Services  Financial Account - Investment  Reserve Account - Government Reserves

10 Factors Affecting Trade (Current Account)  Real price “shocks” –Example: Oil price shock  Government policy change –Tariff/ Trade policy

11 Factors Affecting Investment (Financial Account)  Real return “shocks” –example: turn of business cycle  Government policy (affecting real returns) –tax policy –labor law  Perceived risk –war, political risk

12 Conclusions about real effects Changes in any of these real factors  Shifts supply or demand for currency –Affects exchange rate –Of interest to currency forecasters  Is also reflected in balance of payments data –Thus BOP data of interest to forecasters

13 Market Forces: Monetary Effects

14 Purchasing Power Parity  Logic: “arbitrage” in market for goods

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17 Definitions: PPP  Absolute Purchasing Power Parity The purchasing power of the dollar is the same everywhere in the world  Relative Purchasing Power Parity Exchange rates move to offset differences in rates of inflation.

18 How well does PPP predict in practice? Absolute PPP – Not at all Relative PPP  Works well –In the long run –When differences in inflation are dramatic  Works much less well in the short run

19 Zimbabwe 1994:25% 1998:48% 2002:199% 2006:1,281%  August 2006: 1 st redenomination ZWD$1,000 → ZWN$1 2007:66,212%  August 2008: 2 nd redenomination ZWN$10b → ZWR$1 Dec. 2008 (estimate):6.5x10 108 % or 91% per day  March 2009: Zimbabwe dollar suspended: informal (U.S.) dollarization (C) 2014 Melvin H Jameson Inflation rates and currency redenomination

20 Real Exchange Rate  Definition: Exchange rate after removing the effects of inflation  If Purchasing Power Parity holds, then real exchange rates never change

21 Exchange Rate Policy The role of government

22 How governments affect exchange rates  Currency market intervention –(intentional) –Central Bank buys/sells home currency in exchange for its foreign currency reserves.  Monetary policy –(unintentional through impact of inflation) –Central Bank buys/sells home currency in exchange for bonds

23 Types of Exchange Rate Policies  free float (no intervention)  “dirty”or managed float(some intervention)  fixed exchange rate or “peg” (unlimited intervention at a fixed rate) –through central bank policy –currency board –dollarization

24 Lessons about Exchange Rate Policy  Policy matters (especially in the short run).  In the long run no policy can overcome market forces.


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