Fixed Exchange Rates and Foreign Exchange Intervention (Lecture 8, Chapter 18)
Fixed Exchange Rates and Foreign Exchange Intervention (Lecture 8, Chapter 18)
Lecture 8
Chapter 18
Exchange Rate Determination
Long Run
• Based on PPP “Purchasing Power Parity” theory.
• Compares different countries' currencies through a "basket of goods" approach.
• That is, PPP is the exchange rate at which one nation's currency would be converted into
another to purchase the same and same amounts of a large group of products.
Short Run
• Based on the output of the economy.
• Theory of AD and AS.
• Consumption, investment, government, net trade.
• Fiscal and monetary policies are used to alter changes in exchange rates in both short and
long runs.
Monetary Policy
Purchase/Selling Assets
Any central bank purchase of assets automatically results in an increase in the domestic money
supply, while any central bank sale of assets automatically causes the money supply to decline.
Indirect Intervention
Selling Securities:
Buying Securities:
• Increase assets, increase money in circulation
Reserve Ratio
Fraction of deposits that central banks require a bank to hold in reserves and not loan out
Increase RRR, decrease money in circulation.
Decrease RRR, increase money in circulation.
Central Bank Changes Money Supply Interest Affected → Exchange Rate Affected
Stabilization Policies
When the economy faces any shocks or changes in domestics economic variables, exchange
rate is affected.
However, the effect as well as the magnitude are affected by the type of exchange rate
regime.
Some policies are active under fixed regime and others are inactive.
So, it is of a great importance to identify the regime first and then start stabilize by the
suitable policy.
Policies available are monetary and fiscal policies.
Stabilization Policies under Fixed Exchange Rate Regime
Monetary Policy
• Under a fixed exchange rate, central bank monetary policy tools are powerless to affect the
economy’s money supply or its output.
Fiscal Policy
• Devaluation = depreciation
• Evaluation = appreciation
• Devaluation therefore causes a rise in output, a rise in official reserves, and an expansion of
the money supply
The central bank can’t maintain the fixed exchange rate. ; due to any reason.
Sharp decrease in the reserves and/or high unemployment.
People know that the current exchange rate can’t hold forever, CB should devaluate.
Devaluation will deepen the crisis of balance of payment.
People will invest internationally “capital flight”.
CB decrease money supply, leading to increase in interest rate.
Capital will fly back in if the new domestic interest rate is higher than the foreign interest
rate, taking into consideration the depreciation effect.
There are 195 countries in the world; so, it is not fixing my currency against 1 currency but
rather 194.
However, there is 1 currency or a set of powerful currencies in which countries keep reserves
from.
Between the end of World War II and 1973, the U.S. dollar was the main reserve currency
and almost every country pegged the dollar exchange rate of its money.
Gold standards was used between 1870 and 1914, although many countries attempted
unsuccessfully to restore a permanent gold standard after the end of World War I in 1918.
Cross rates imply that even when CB is fixing currency/dollar exchange rate, it will
consequently fix the rest currencies.
What would be the effect of a purchase of domestic assets by the central bank of the reserve
currency country?
Questions:
1. How do you determine the exchange rate in the short as well as long run?
Fixed → Exchange rate is fixed according to the dynamics of the central bank.
Pegged Floating (Dirty Floating) → Exchange rate is fixed within a range of values determined
by central bank according to the market forces.
Floating (Clean Floating) → Exchange rate is floating according to the market dynamics.
Direct Intervention
Indirect Intervention
2. Reserve Ratio
Increase RRR → Decrease money in circulation.
Decrease RRR → Increase money in circulation.
Open market operations allow the central banks in other countries to prevent price inflation or
deflation without directly interfering in the market economy, Instead of using regulations to
control lending, the central bank can simply raise or lower the cost of borrowing money.
Selling Securities:
Decrease assets, decrease money in circulation.
Buying Securities:
6. How could we stabilize the exchange rate under the fixed exchange rate regime?
2. Monetary policy: The central bank can adjust its monetary policy to influence the exchange
rate. For example, increasing interest rates can attract foreign investors, leading to an inflow of
foreign currency and strengthening the exchange rate.