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Exchange Rate Systems: Pros and Cons

1. There are tradeoffs between fixed and floating exchange rate systems. Fixed rates provide commitment and price stability but limit monetary policy flexibility, while floating rates allow independent monetary policy but bring exchange rate uncertainty. 2. Issues with fixed rates include the possibility of speculative attacks if currency reserves are depleted, but currency boards requiring full foreign currency backing can avoid this. Unilaterally adopting another currency imports its stability. 3. The impossible trinity holds that a country cannot have free capital flows, a fixed exchange rate, and an independent monetary policy simultaneously, and must choose two of the three. The UK allows free capital and independent policy, while Hong Kong fixes its rate and loses policy autonomy.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
426 views4 pages

Exchange Rate Systems: Pros and Cons

1. There are tradeoffs between fixed and floating exchange rate systems. Fixed rates provide commitment and price stability but limit monetary policy flexibility, while floating rates allow independent monetary policy but bring exchange rate uncertainty. 2. Issues with fixed rates include the possibility of speculative attacks if currency reserves are depleted, but currency boards requiring full foreign currency backing can avoid this. Unilaterally adopting another currency imports its stability. 3. The impossible trinity holds that a country cannot have free capital flows, a fixed exchange rate, and an independent monetary policy simultaneously, and must choose two of the three. The UK allows free capital and independent policy, while Hong Kong fixes its rate and loses policy autonomy.

Uploaded by

danishia09
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Pros and Cons of Different Exchange Rate Systems

Floating Fixed
Pros  Allows monetary policy to be used  Commitment to a fixed exchange
for other purposes rate is one way to discipline a
 Policy makers free to pursue other nation’s monetary authority and
goals such as stabilising prevent excessive growth in
employment or prices monetary supply
 BUT other policy rules to which
central bank could be committed e.g.
inflation rate target
 Simpler to implement than other
policy rules because money supply
adjusts automatically
 BUT could lead to greater volatility
in income and employment
Cons  Exchange rate uncertainty makes  Monetary policy committed to
international trade more difficult maintaining the exchange rate at
 After abandonment of Bretton announced level
Woods system of fixed e, real and
nominal exchange rates become v
volatile
 BUT even under exchange-rate
volatility, amount of world trade
has continued to rise under floating
exchange rates

Speculative Attacks, Currency Boards, ‘Dollarization’ and ‘Euroization’

 One issue with fixed exchange rate: you might not have enough of a currency to manipulate
the money supply!
 If people come to the central bank to sell large quantities of domestic currency, the c.b’s
foreign currency reserves may deplete
 Therefore central bank has to abandon the fixed exchange rate
 Raises possibility of a speculative attack (a change in investors’ perceptions that makes the
fixed exchange rate untenable)
 Rumous that exchange rate peg will be abandoned  people run to c.b to convert domestic
currency to foreign before domestic currency loses value  drain c.b reserves  peg
abandoned (rumour is self-fulfilling)
 To avoid this: fixed exchange rate should be supported by a currency board
o Currency board: an arrangement by which the central bank holds enough foreign
currency to back each unit of the domestic currency
o Once currency board adopted  country could just use the foreign currency
 However members of a monetary union typically share in the seigniorage revenue from
printing the common currency
 Country unilaterally decides to adopt another country’s currency: then issuing country gets
the revenue that is generated from printing money
 Advantage to adopting currency: effectively imports price and currency stability from the
issuing country
The Impossible Trinity

 Impossible for nation to have free capital flows, fixed exchange rate and independent
monetary policy
 Must choose one side of the triangle

1. Allow free flows of capital and conduct an independent monetary policy (UK)
 Exchange rate must float to equilibrate the FX exchange market

2. Allow free flows of capital and fix exchange rate (Hong Kong)
 Loses ability to run an independent monetary policy
 Money supply must adjust to keep the exchange rate at its predetermined level
 When nation fixes its currency to that of another nation  adopts other nation’s
monetary policy

3. Restrict the international flow of capital in and out of the country (China)
 Interest rate no longer fixed by world interest rates
 Instead determined by domestic forces ALMOST LIKE completely closed economy
 Therefore possibly to fix exchange rate and conduct an independent monetary policy
Common Currency Areas and European Economic and Monetary Union

 Does a single currency offer sufficient flexibility for member countries to withstand/mitigate
the effects of financial crisis?
 Late 90s: European countries gave up national currencies and use a new common currency:
euro, forming European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU)
 Adopting a single currency  gave up control over own monetary policy

Common Currency Areas

 Common currency area: geographical area through which one currency circulates and is
accepted as the medium of exchange
o A.k.a currency union or monetary union
 EMU (European Economic and Monetary Union): common currency area formed by 17
European countries that have adopted the euro as their currency
o These countries make up the Euro Area
o Euro officially came into existence on 1 January 1999
o Since they have a single currency also have a single monetary policy
o Monetary policy formulated by the ECB (European Central bank) + ESCB (European
System of Central Banks)

The Benefits of a Single Currency

 Reduction in Transaction Costs in Trade


o When importing, no longer has to pay a charge to bank for converting domestic
currency to foreign currency
o Banking sector loses out on the commission it used to charge for converting
currencies BUT this does not affect the fact that the reduction in transaction costs is a
net gain
 Paying a cost to convert currencies is in fact a deadweight loss
 Companies pay the transaction cost but get nothing tangible in return
 Resources used in banking services formerly can be transferred elsewhere 
net increase in welfare
o Gains could be even larger from eliminated transaction costs if inter-bank payment
systems between countries were better integrated

 Reduction in Price Discrimination


o If goods are priced in a single currency, should be much harder to disguise price
differences across countries
 Assumes transparency in prices will lead to arbitrage in goods across the
common currency area (buy goods where cheaper, reducing demand where
they are more expensive)
o BUT EMU has not brought an end to price discrimination
 E.g. supermarkets
 Large transaction costs involved in arbitraging such as travelling, feasibility of
carrying goods across
 Even big ticket goods e.g. household appliances where transaction costs lower
percentage of the price of the good, likelihood of arbitrage is low due to
durable nature
 Reduction in Foreign-Exchange-Rate Variability
o Reduction in uncertainty that results from having a single currency
o Comes from removal of exchange-rate fluctuations
o May also affect investment in the economy
o Increase in investment  higher economic growth

The Costs of a Single Currency

 Loss of Monetary Policy Sovereignty


o Gives up national currency
o Therefore gives up freedom to set own monetary policy and possibility of
macroeconomic adjustment coming about through movements in the external value of
its currency

 Asymmetric Demand Shocks

 Asymmetric Supply Shocks


 Loss of Fiscal Policy Sovereignty

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