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Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates

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Presentation on theme: "Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates"— Presentation transcript:

1 Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates
A2 Economics A2 Economics tutor2u™ PowerPoint Briefings 2006

2 Exchange Rate Systems Countries can choose their exchange rate system:
(1) Free-floating exchange rate (2) Managed floating system (3) Semi-fixed exchange rate system (4) Fully-fixed exchange rate system (5) Monetary Union with other countries

3 The Sterling Exchange Rate Index

4 Floating Exchange Rates
The value of the currency is determined purely by market demand and supply of the currency No target for the exchange rate is set by the Government There is no need for official intervention in the currency market by the central bank Sterling has floated freely on the foreign exchange markets since the UK suspended membership of the ERM in September 1992

5 Managed Floating Exchange Rate
Currency is usually determined by market forces Some currency market intervention might be considered as part of demand management Interest rates may be changed to affect the market value of the currency No attempt is made to influence the long-term external value of the currency There are limits to the effectiveness of intervention in markets

6 Semi-Fixed Exchange Rate
The exchange rate is given a specific target The currency can move between permitted bands of fluctuation on a day-to-day basis Exchange rate becomes an target of monetary policy-making (e.g. interest rates are set to meet the exchange rate target such as when the UK was in the ERM). The central bank must intervene to maintain the value of the currency within the set targets if it moves outside the agreed range Re-valuations of the currency are seen as a last resort or when intervention is proving ineffective

7 Fully-fixed exchange rate
Commitment to a fixed exchange rate The exchange rate is pegged There are no fluctuations from the agreed central rate Examples? This system achieves exchange rate stability but perhaps at the expense of domestic macro stability A country can automatically improve its competitiveness by reducing its costs below that of other countries – knowing that the exchange rate will remain stable

8 China and the US dollar China has been criticized by those who say its fixed-rate monetary policy boosts exports by keeping the yuan at a low level.

9 Currency Boards Currency board: a country commits, by law, to exchange domestic currency for a specified foreign currency at a fixed rate. Example: Argentina adopted currency board between when one peso can be exchanged to one dollar. To maintain the currency board arrangement, the constitution of Argentina specifies that the amount of domestic money supply cannot exceed the country’s foreign reserves.

10 Currency boards - Argentina

11 UK Economic History : UK operated with a managed floating exchange rate. There was some intervention by the central bank to influence the exchange rate and government was in control of interest rates October September 1992: UK a member of the European exchange rate mechanism (ERM) – the exchange rate was a specific target of economic policy September 1992 – present day: the UK has operated with a free-floating exchange rate – no intervention by the Bank of England. Exchange rate is purely market determined Since 1999, the Euro has been in existence as twelve nations have established a single currency. Sterling floats freely against the Euro and also against the dollar, yen etc.

12 The ERM experiment Britain entered the ERM in October 1990
The main aims were to (i) Achieve exchange rate stability to promote trade (ii) Provide an anchor for Monetary policy in order to bring down inflation – the UK was fixing sterling against the low-inflation German economy Under the ERM UK interest rates had to be set at a level consistent with keeping sterling at agreed levels (DM 2.95) But the weakness of the British economy (recession, rising unemployment and a housing recession) meant that interest rates were probably too high for our own needs Inflation came down but sterling was weak The speculators attacked!

13 Coming out of the ERM – Sept 1992

14 Counting the cost of leaving the ERM
Treasury notes – published in February 2005(!) On Black Wednesday itself, September 16, 1992, the Bank of England sold some $28 billion of official foreign reserves trying to keep sterling within its ERM target range This intervention failed and sterling was forced out of the ERM and allowed to float freely Advantages: A lower pound boosted the competitiveness of exporters Interest rates could now come down in order to provide a boost to aggregate demand and take the British economy out of recession Fears of rising inflation proved unfounded – there was plenty of spare capacity in the British economy at the time

15 Evaluating exchange rate systems
Fixed versus floating rates

16 King on exchange rate regimes
Countries have always faced constraints in choosing their exchange rate regime. Any country can have only two out of the following three: an independent monetary policy a fixed exchange rate an open capital account. As international financial markets have developed, there has been a general movement to flexible exchange rates supported by credible domestic monetary policies. That is a sensible use of the price mechanism to respond to complex and unpredictable shocks.

17 The Case for Floating Rates
Less need for currency reserves for use in intervention Useful instrument of macroeconomic adjustment e.g. a lower currency can stimulate aggregate demand Provides partial “automatic correction” for a trade deficit Reduced risk of currency speculation Freedom (autonomy) for domestic monetary policy Floating exchange rates are not always volatile exchange rates!

18 The Case for Fixed Exchange Rates
Stability - helpful for trade and capital investment Some flexibility (i.e. the occasional devaluation or revaluation of the currency – known as “realignment”) Reductions in costs of currency hedging for businesses Fixed rate provides a discipline on domestic producers to keep costs and prices down and to raise productivity Reinforces gains in comparative advantage: If one country has a fixed rate with another, then differences in relative costs will quite easily be reflected in changes in the rate of growth of exports and imports

19 Dollar-Rouble


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