Chapter 06
Chapter 06
Chapter 06
11th Edition
by Jeff Madura
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6 Government Influence on Exchange Rates
Chapter Objectives
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Fixed Exchange Rate System
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Fixed Exchange Rate System
Examples:
Bretton Woods Agreement 1944 – 1971 - Each currency was
valued in terms of gold.
Smithsonian Agreement 1971 – 1973 - called for a
devaluation of the U.S. dollar by about 8 percent against
other currencies.
Advantages of fixed exchange rate system
Insulate country from risk of currency appreciation.
Allow firms to engage in direct foreign investment without
currency risk.
Disadvantages of fixed exchange rate system
Risk that government will alter value of currency.
Country and MNC may be more vulnerable to economic
conditions in other countries.
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Freely Floating Exchange Rate System
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Managed Float Exchange Rate System
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Exhibit 6.1 Exchange Rate Arrangements
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Pegged Exchange Rate System
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Pegged Exchange Rate Systems
Examples:
Europe’s Snake Arrangement 1972 – 1979
European Monetary System (EMS) 1979 – 1992
Mexico’s Pegged System 1994
China’s Pegged Exchange Rate 1996 – 2005
Venezuela’s Pegged Exchange Rate 2010
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Pegged Exchange Rate Systems (Cont.)
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Exhibit 6.2 Pegged Exchange Rates
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Dollarization
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A Single European Currency
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A Single European Currency
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Reasons for Government Intervention
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Direct Intervention
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Exhibit 6.3 Effects of Direct Central Bank
Intervention in the Foreign Exchange Market
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Direct Intervention
Reliance on reserves
The potential effectiveness of a central bank’s direct intervention is the
amount of reserves it can use.
Nonsterilized versus sterilized intervention (See Exhibit 6.4)
When the Fed intervenes in the foreign exchange market without
adjusting for the change in the money supply, it is engaging in a
nonsterilized intervention.
In a sterilized intervention, the Fed intervenes in the foreign
exchange market and simultaneously engages in offsetting
transactions in the Treasury securities markets.
Speculating on direct intervention
Some traders in the foreign exchange market attempt to determine when
Federal Reserve intervention is occurring and the extent of the
intervention in order to capitalize on the anticipated results of the
intervention effort.
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Exhibit 6.4 Forms of Central Bank Intervention
in the Foreign Exchange Market
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Indirect Intervention
The Fed can affect the dollar’s value indirectly by influencing the factors that
determine it.
where
e percentage change in the spot rate
INF change in the differenti al between U. S. inflation
and the foreign country' s inflation
INT change in the differenti al between th e U.S. interest rate
and the foreign country' s interest rate
INC change in the differenti al between th e U.S. income level
and the foreign country' s income level
GC change in government controls
EXP change in expectatio ns of future exchange rates
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Indirect Intervention
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Intervention as a Policy Tool
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Exhibit 6.5 How Central Bank Intervention Can
Stimulate the U.S. Economy
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Exhibit 6.6 How Central Bank Intervention Can Reduce
Inflation
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