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Foreign Currency Exchange Rates

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Foreign Currency Exchange Rates Currency Markets An exchange rate tells you how much of one currency you must give up to get a unit of another currency. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Foreign Currency Exchange Rates


1
Foreign Currency Exchange Rates
2
Currency Markets
  • An exchange rate tells you how much of one
    currency you must give up to get a unit of
    another currency. This is also called the nominal
    exchange rate.
  • The real exchange rate is the rate at which a
    person can trade the goods and services of one
    country for the goods and services of another
    country.

3
Calculating the real exchange rate
  • Real exchange rate
  • Nominal exchange rate X domestic price
  • foreign price

4
  • Suppose a bushel of American rice sells for 100,
    and a bushel of Japanese rice sells for 16,000
    yen. And suppose the nominal exchange rate is 80
    yen/dollar. What is the real exchange rate of
    Japanese rice to American rice?
  • Real Exchange Rate
  • (80 yen/dollar) x (100 per bushel of American
    rice)
  • 16,000 yen per bushel of Japanese rice
  • _8,000 yen per bushel of American rice
  • 16,000 yen per bushel of Japanese rice
  • ½ bushel of Japanese rice per bushel of
    American rice

5
Macroeconomic focus on the price level
  • Macro exchange rates focus instead on the
    relative price levels of each country.
  • Real exchange rate (e x P) /P
  • Where P is the price index for a U.S. market
    basket, and P is the price index for a foreign
    market basket, and e is the nominal exchange rate
    between U.S. and foreign currencies.

6
Purchasing power parity and the law of one price
  • The theory states that a unit of any given
    currency should be able to buy the same quantity
    of goods in all countries.
  • That is because, if a currency bought more in one
    place than in another, clever people would take
    advantage of arbitrage opportunities to buy a
    good for less in one country and sell it in
    another, with the only difference being the
    different values of currencies in each country.

7
PPP
  • This processbuying low and selling highwould
    continue until the prices were the same in the
    two markets.
  • Thus the theory of PPP says that a currency
    should have the same purchasing power in all
    countries. At least, it should have the same real
    value in every country.
  • But that also means that the nominal exchange
    rates between the currencies of the two countries
    depends on the price levels in those two
    countries.

8
Inflation and currency exchange rates
  • The nominal exchange rate between two currencies
    must reflect the different price levels in those
    countries.
  • BUT, when the central bank prints large
    quantities of money, that money loses value in
    terms of the amount of foreign currency it can
    buy.
  • When one country experiences inflation, prices in
    that country rise faster relative to prices in
    other countries.

9
Big Mac Index
  • Started in half-jest by The Economist, the Big
    Mac Index measures exchange rates based on the
    price of a Big Mac in each country. Its now
    published regularly.
  • The predicted exchange rate is the one that makes
    the cost of a Big Mac the same in both countries.

10
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11
Other determinants that affect currency
appreciation and depreciation
  1. Consumer tastes
  2. Relative incomes
  3. Relative inflation
  4. Speculation
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