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Fixed Exchange Rates and Currency Unions

Fixed Exchange Rates and Currency Unions. Introduction. Why would a government buy or sell foreign exchange? How does the overall economy and economic policy change when the exchange rate is not allowed to float freely? How do fixed exchange rate systems work?

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Fixed Exchange Rates and Currency Unions

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  1. Fixed Exchange Rates and Currency Unions

  2. Introduction • Why would a government buy or sell foreign exchange? • How does the overall economy and economic policy change when the exchange rate is not allowed to float freely? • How do fixed exchange rate systems work? • How do countries with fixed exchange rates affect the world economy?

  3. Inconvertible Currencies • To fix a currency can make it an inconvertible currency • One that cannot be freely traded for another country’s currency among domestic consumers and businesses • Common term for this system is exchange controls • Government or central bank becomes a monopolist controlling all sales of foreign currency at set price • Easy to “fix” the price of foreign exchange • Common among developing countries

  4. Inconvertible Currencies • Foreign exchange market • Downward sloping demand • Perfectly inelastic supply • One seller of foreign exchange - government • Equilibrium at intersection determines fixed exchange rate • Government balances available supply of foreign exchange with demand to achieve set exchange rate

  5. Inconvertible Currencies

  6. Inconvertible Currencies • To keep exchange rate fixed, total outflows and inflows must be equal at all times • Requires government to control flow of capital into and out of the country • Domestic individuals and companies’ ability to purchase foreign financial assets is severely limited.

  7. Difficulties & Exchange Controls • Exchange controls lead to • Government initially balancing demand and supply for foreign exchange • Eliminated wide swings in exchange rate • Difficulties with exchange controls • Must deal with government bureaucracy • Government sole source of foreign exchange • Less quality than free market • Efficiency losses with only one provider

  8. Difficulties & Exchange Controls • Difference between nominal and real exchange rates • If nominal rate close to PPP rate, then relatively sustainable • Money supplies in developing countries difficult to control • Domestic inflation rate can likely be greater than foreign inflation rate • Country’s real exchange rate is depreciating and nominal rate is becoming over valued

  9. Difficulties & Exchange Controls • Difference between nominal and real exchange rates (cont.) • Assume expansionary policies - economy expands and price level increases • Real exchange rate depreciates and nominal rate is fixed • Imports relatively cheaper and domestic demand increasing – rising demand for foreign exchange • Excess demand at fixed exchange rate

  10. Difficulties & Exchange Controls

  11. Difficulties & Exchange Controls • Balancing demand leaves 3 options • Allow currency to depreciate • Large depreciation can cause higher inflation and lower GDP • Government could implement contractionary policies to reduce demand for foreign exchange • Sacrifice domestic demand to maintain exchange rate

  12. Difficulties & Exchange Controls • Balancing demand leaves 3 options • Ration available supply of foreign exchange • Government decides who gets the foreign exchange • Should provide for necessary imports and deny for unnecessary • What is considered necessary? • Obviously gives way to large incentives for government corruption

  13. Difficulties & Exchange Controls • Additional problems for economy • Depreciation of real exchange rate makes exports more expensive • Supply for foreign exchange available to country coming from exports decreases • Shortage of foreign exchange increases • Rationing problem is more severe • May cause product and input shortages in domestic markets

  14. Difficulties & Exchange Controls

  15. Intervention: Foreign Exchange • Government may choose to peg their currency to that of another currency • Mexico might peg peso to US dollar • Mexico uses intervention – buying and selling of foreign exchange to influence value of exchange rate • Mexico selling foreign exchange increases supply and Mexico buying dollars increases demand

  16. Intervention: Foreign Exchange • Foreign exchange market in equilibrium with Mexico pegging rate of XRP • Economic growth – increase demand for foreign exchange • To maintain XRP, government sells foreign exchange to increase supply • Maintains exchange rate and prevents depreciation of currency

  17. Intervention: Foreign Exchange

  18. Intervention: Foreign Exchange • Assume Mexico’s interest rates increase relative to US • Capital flows to Mexico increasing supply of foreign exchange • To peg rate, Mexico purchases foreign exchange increasing demand • Maintains exchange rate and prevents appreciation of currency

  19. Intervention: Foreign Exchange

  20. Intervention: Foreign Exchange • Long run can hold rate as long as can buy or sell foreign exchange • Mobile portfolio capital can be a good or bad thing for a country with fixed rate • Inflows create additional supply of foreign exchange for country • Capital flows volatile in short run and create problems when outflow from domestic markets • If cannot maintain peg, can lead to “currency crisis” causing severe depreciation of currency

  21. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I • Internal balance must be adjusted to stay in line with a fixed exchange rate over time • Example: Assume domestic economy growing quickly • Domestic demand for foreign exchange increases as demand for imports increases • Private sector has balance of payments deficit

  22. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I • Example (cont.) • Government sells foreign currency in foreign exchange market to maintain exchange rate • AD increases and hope current account deficit keeps it from going past full employment level • With sufficient reserves, government can intervene until economic growth slows

  23. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I

  24. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I • Example (cont.) • With government intervention in foreign exchange market, economic situation will correct itself • When government sells foreign currency they are getting domestic currency in exchange • This leads to decrease in domestic money supply (similar to selling government bonds)

  25. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I • Example (cont.) • Foreign exchange is not part of country’s money supply • The country’s monetary base is reduced by amount of intervention • Domestic money supply contracts by multiple of amount of intervention

  26. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I • Example (cont.) • Effects of intervention • The exchange rate is stabilized in the short run as shown earlier • Begun automatic adjustment almost guaranteeing balance of payments deficit will not continue in long run

  27. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I • Effects of intervention • AD falls with fall in money supply • Equilibrium levels of output and price level fall • Maintained fixed exchange rate by reducing rate of economic growth • Allows not only exchange rate to be fixed, but automatically adjusts economy for sustainable external equilibrium

  28. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates I • Maintaining fixed exchange rate takes away governments ability to use discretionary monetary policy to influence the economy • Money supply becomes a function of country’s external balance based on how much government must intervene in foreign exchange market

  29. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates II • Along with benefits, there is a cost associated with fixed exchange rates • Automatic changes from intervention occur without considering the state of the domestic economy • Assume external balance is in deficit and economy is producing less than full employment

  30. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates II • Money supply declines and country’s external balance is balanced • Internal balance would change decreasing output and unemployment would increase • Intervention in this case is inconsistent with internal balances • However, some cases it can be consistent

  31. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates II • Table 17.1 summarizes effects of intervention on external and internal balances • First column – state of internal balance • Second column – position of external balance • Third & fourth – appropriate government response to solve internal and external balance respectively • Last column – lists consistency

  32. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates II • Two cases where monetary policy solves internal and external balances – consistent • Two case where internal and external balances conflict – inconsistent • These two cases of inconsistency make fixing exchange rates a problem for some countries

  33. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates II

  34. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates II • Inconsistencies • External deficit when at less than full employment, adjustment leads to recession to maintain fixed exchange rates • External surplus with high inflation or rapid economic growth, adjustment leads to higher inflation or more rapid economic growth

  35. Macro Adjustment – Fixed Rates II • Most participants in international trade prefer fixed exchange rates as it decreases risk of transactions • But, fixed exchange rates mean that on occasion internal and external balances will be mismatched with policy

  36. Fiscal Policy & Internal Balance • In the short run, there are solutions to the dilemma between internal and external balances • Government can assign roles • Monetary policy for external balance • Fiscal policy for internal balance • Example: government adopts expansionary fiscal policy

  37. Fiscal Policy & Internal Balance • Example (cont.) - • Government budget deficit financed through borrowing • Demand for loanable funds increases raising interest rates (D to D’) • Open economy, rise in interest rates creates inflow of foreign capital • Domestic supply of loanable funds increases (S to S+f)

  38. Fiscal Policy & Internal Balance

  39. Fiscal Policy & Internal Balance • Example (cont.) • Inflow of capital requires foreign investors to sell foreign currency or buy domestic currency • Supply of foreign exchange increases • Exchange rate to appreciate, but with fixed rate government intervenes • Demand for foreign exchange increases maintaining pegged or fixed rate

  40. Fiscal Policy & Internal Balance

  41. Fiscal Policy & Internal Balance • Example (cont.) • Secondary effect on market for loanable funds • Government purchases of foreign exchange increases domestic money supply • Increase in money supply leads to increase in supply of loanable funds (S+f to S’+f) • Equilibrium interest rate moves back toward ie

  42. Fiscal Policy & Internal Balance

  43. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic • Expansionary fiscal policy • Increases AD, increasing output and price level • Intervention in foreign exchange increases money supply • AD increases even more with increase in money supply • With open economy and fixed exchange rates, effect of policy are more pronounced

  44. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic

  45. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic • Contractionary Fiscal Policy • Demand for loanable funds decreases • Lowers interest rate • Investment in domestic country decreases – capital outflows • Supply of loanable funds decreases (S to S-f) • Interest rates increase towards original equilibrium

  46. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic

  47. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic • Contractionary Fiscal Policy (cont.) • Capital outflow causes demand for foreign exchange to increase • Pressure for currency to depreciate • Intervention in foreign exchange market leads to increase in supply of foreign exchange to maintain fixed rate

  48. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic

  49. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic • Contractionary Fiscal Policy (cont.) • Secondary effect from change in money supply • Selling foreign exchange buys domestic currency decreasing money supply • Supply of loanable funds decreases even further moving equilibrium interest rate back toward original rate

  50. Effects of Fiscal Policy - Domestic

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