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Title: INTERNATIONAL MACROECONOMICS SEMINAR I


1
INTERNATIONAL MACROECONOMICSSEMINAR IThe
Choice of an Appropriate Exchange Rate Regime
March 2004
2
Outline
  • The exchange rate adjustment mechanism
  • Advantages and disadvantages of exchange rate
    regimes
  • Classification of exchange rate regimes
  • Corner solutions
  • Intermediate regimes
  • Optimal choice of an exchange rate regime and
    further discussions

3
The Exchange Rate Adjustment Mechanism(Stefanie
and Bengu)
4
Exchange Rate Adjustment to External Shocks
  • External Demand Shock
  • (same for Fiscal Expansion)
  • Recession in another country
  • Introduction of new technology
  • Price Shock in World Markets
  • Commodity Price Changes
  • Oil-price crises
  • World Interest Rate Shock
  • Balance of Payment Problems

Fixed Exchange Rates
Effects
Flexible Exchange Rates
5
Negative Demand Shock in Flexible Exchange Rate
Regime
i
LM
A
BP 0
A
IS1
IS2
Y
Y
6
PROBLEM STICKY PRICES / WAGES
  • Prices/Wages do not react instantaneously to
    shocks in the goods market, where adjustment
    takes time.
  • This causes exchange rate to be volatile and to
    over-shoot (Dornbuschs 1976 paper), that is, to
    exceed its equilibrium value first and then, as
    time passes, get equal to it.

7
Exchange Rate Overshooting
  • Exchange Rates and Prices do not move at the same
    rate
  • Monetary expansion pushes interest rates down,
    exchange rate adjusts immediately, prices adjust
    only gradually, hence in the SR abrupt change in
    relative prices and competitiveness
  • Flexible Exchange Rates produce large exchange
    rate fluctuations

Exchange rate
Prices
8
External Negative Demand Shock in Fixed Exchange
Regime
i
i
LM2
LM1
IS1
IS2
Y
Y2
Y1
Y3
9
Price Adjustment versus Devaluation
P/E
Three Options A Intervention AAA AAM AA
Devaluation
A
A
A
NX0
NX0
Y
Y
Y lt
10
Automatic Adjustment Process with a Balance of
Payment Deficit
P
AS1
AS2
E
E
AD1
AD2
NX0
Y
Y
Y lt
11
Effects of Negative Demand Shocks
Fixed Rates Flexible Rates
Negative Effect on output and employment and losses of foreign reserves or international credit expansion Contraction in output has no long run effects on equilibrium output. Possibility of sticky prices and overshooting of exchange rates
Automatic Adjustment Mechanism Fixed But Adjustable
Automatic adjustment through a sequence of price and money adjustment based on trade balance. Long and painful. Implicit assumption of price-stickiness Immediate devaluation Works only if increasing price level does not off-set devaluation gain Possibility of J-Curve Effect
12
Advantages and Disadvantages of Exchange Rate
Regimes (Neng, Katarina and Zhu Yiang)
  • Frankel, J. No Single Currency Regime is Right
    for All Countries at All Times 1996
  • Obstfeld, M. and K. Rogoff, The Mirage of Fixed
    Exchange Rates 1995
  • Stockman, A. Choosing an Exchange Rate System
    1999

13
Full Capital Controls
The Impossible Trinity
Exchange rate stability
Monetary independence
Pure Float
Monetary union
Full financial integration
14
Fixed
Flexible
? Currency Union ? Currency Board ? Truly fixed
exchange rate
? Free float ? Managed float (dirty float)
? Fixed but adjustable peg ? Crawling peg ?
Basket peg ? Target zone or band
Frankel (1999) No Single Currency Regime is
Right for all
Intermediate Regimes
15
  • Flexible exchange rate regimes
  • ? Free float - The central bank does not
    intervene in the foreign exchange market, but
    rather allows private supply and demand to clear
    on their own.
  • e.g. United States
  • ? Managed float - also known as dirty float, it
    is defined as a readiness to intervene in the
    foreign exchange market, without defending any
    particular parity.

16
  • Intermediate regimes
  • ? Fixed but adjustable peg - countries that
    declare themselves fixed, in fact periodically
    undergo realignments.
  • e.g. Bretton Woods regime
  • ? Crawling peg - in high-inflation countries,
    the peg can be regularly reset in a series of
    devaluations, as often as weekly.
  • ? Basket peg - the exchange rate is fixed in
    terms of a weighted basket of currencies instead
    of any one major currency.
  • ? Target zone or band - the authorities
    intervene when the exchange rate hits
    pre-announced margins on either side of a central
    parity.
  • e.g. ERM (the Exchange Rate Mechanism)

17
  • Fixed exchange rate regimes
  • ? Currency Union - the currency that
    circulates domestically is the same as is
    circulating in one or more major neighbors or
    partners.
  • e.g. EMU
  • ? Currency board - a monetary institution that
    only issues currency that is fully backed by
    foreign assets.
  • e.g. Argentina, Hong Kong
  • ? Truly fixed exchange rate - fixing to one
    of main world currencies dollar, euro, etc.

18
Flexible exchange rate regimes
  • Advantages
  • ? The major advantage is that it allows the
    country to pursue independent monetary policy.
    When the economy is hit by a shock, the central
    bank is able to respond very fast.
  • Disadvantages
  • Exchange-rate uncertainty reduces international
    trade,
  • discourages investment and increases costs of
    hedging the
  • exchange rate risk
  • A tendency toward volatility that does not
    always derive
  • from macroeconomic fundamentals, including
    occasional
  • speculative bubbles and crashes

19
Fixed exchange rate regimes
  • Advantages
  • ? To reduce transaction costs and exchange rate
    risk, which can discourage trade and investment
  • ? To provide a credible nominal anchor for
    monetary policy (credibility/expectation)
  • Disadvantages
  • A tendency toward borrowers effectively-unhedge
    d
  • exposure in foreign currency, ending badly in
    speculative
  • attacks and multiple equilibrium
  • Monetary policy is less powerful (or completely
  • powerless)

20
Issue 1 Why It Is Difficult to Peg? ?
Technically Possible ? Real Problem Competing
Government Objectives
Issue 2 Is the cost of Fixed exchange
regime very high? (OCA) ? Experience similar
shocks ? Or, have high factor mobility
21
In summary...
Whether the advantages of fixed exchange
rates or the advantages of floating exchange rate
are likely to dominate is depend on
characteristics of the country and the period in
question.
22
Corner Solutions-Bipolar View(Wei Wei Zheng and
Susilawani)
23
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24
A. HARD PEG
  • Characteristics of countries that should fix
    firmly
  • Small size
  • Preponderance of economic fluctuations that
    originate domestically rather than abroad
  • Openness to trade
  • High labor mobility
  • Availability of a fiscal mechanism to cushion
    downturns
  • A high correlation of the local business cycle
    with the country to which a currency peg is
    contemplated

25
Additional characteristics for most rigid
institutional arrangement currency board, full
dollarization or monetary union
  • A strong need to import monetary and financial
    stability due to a history of hyperinflation
  • An absence of credible public institutions
  • Unusually large exposure to nervous investors
  • Access to an adequate reserve
  • Law essential for Currency board
  • Willingness of the foreign country whose currency
    is used to allow input into monetary policy ( A
    case of full monetary union such as EMU)
  • The same monetary policy with the foreign country
    that the currency is pegged to

26
Currency Board
  • A monetary institution that only issues currency
    that is fully backed by foreign assets
  • Principal attributes
  • An exchange rate that is fixed by policy and law
  • A reserve requirement demanding that for each
    dollars worth of domestic currency is backed by
    a dollars worth of foreign reserves
  • A self correcting balance of payment mechanism
    Example A
    payment deficit contracts the MS
    contracts the spending automatically
  • Countries with currency board- Hong Kong,
    Argentina, Estonia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Bosnia
  • Strength - Create policy environment by removing
    from the monetary authorities the option of
    printing money to finance government deficits
  •  

27
Dollarization/ Monetary union
  • A total surrender of monetary independence. In
    other words, to give up totally the domestic
    currency for foreign currency
  • Still retain a small degree of monetary
    independence although not zero. In the case of
    Argentina, its convertibility law ensures the
    switch from one currency to another.

28
B. Free Floating
  • Large economy
  • Higher integration within the border than across
    the border
  • High mobility of labor, trade and fiscal transfer
  • Higher correlation of the business cycle within
    the border than across the border
  • Confidence of international investors
  • Strong and well functioning central banks
  • Exchange rate fluctuation is not a major concern
  • Example United States

29
Intermediate Regimes(Peng Dai, Tolga and Meng
Huang)
30
What is the optimal choice of an exchange rate
regime?
  • It is the solution to the minimization of a loss
    function
  • If monetary shocks dominate ? fixed
  • If real shocks dominate ? flexible
  • If neither dominates ? managed float
  • If consider AS function and wage indexation ?
    depends on the degree of indexation

31
What is the optimal choice of an exchange rate
regime?
  • Optimization seldom gives corner solutions
  • Shocks can be partially absorbed by exchange
    rates and partially by CB accommodation
  • So, why the popularity of the bipolar view?

32
Bipolar View
  • Why the popularity of the bipolar view?
  • Although
  • There is no satisfactory theoretical argument
    (e.g. impossible trinity, unhedged foreign
    liabilities, reluctance to exit the peg) in
    support of bipolar view,
  • The problem of verifiability in complicated and
    nontransparent intermediate regimes
  • might be an explanation.

33
Bipolar View
  • Why the popularity of the bipolar view?
  • Many arguments on grounds of susceptibility to
    currency crises
  • Previous unsuccessful episodes and lack of mature
    and well-established institutions undermine the
    credibility of new intermediate regimes
  • Reluctance of CB to realign in time before a
    crisis outbreaks

34
Beyond Bipolar View
  • Can corner solutions remedy these deficiencies on
    their own?
  • Unlikely. Should consider all aspects of a
    monetary framework together rather than in
    isolation.
  • Free float ? No costly devaluation
  • CB autonomy ? Exchange rate stability and lower
    inflation
  • Announced Monetary Targets ? Lower inflation and
    inflation persistence, more flexibility through
    transparency

35
The Optimal Choice of an Exchange Rate
Regime(Yin-Che and Deren)
36
Theory of optimal exchange rate regimes-Choice
criteria
  • size of an economy
  • openness of an economy
  • labor market flexibility
  • capital mobility
  • fiscal redistribution
  • exposure to shocks
  • quality of policies
  • diversified production/export performance

37
Weaknesses in the standard theory of optimal
exchange rate regime choices (Calvo and Mishkin,
2003)
  • Theory fails in some respects. Examples
  • Fiscal transfers do not change relative prices
  • Labor mobility is a poor substitute for exchange
    rate flexibility
  • The standard theory implicitly assumes an ability
    to set up institutions that will assure a fixed
    exchange rate
  • Presumes that a time-consistent choice is made on
    the exchange rate regime, whereas in many
    countries, the exchange rates the exchange rate
    regime may frequently shift
  • The financial sector is ignored
  • Pays no attention to transaction costs and
    liquidity considerations
  • Thus, the theory does not apply well to
    especially emerging markets

38
How to compare exchange rate regimes?
  • Analytical arguments often lead to opposing
    conclusions.
  • Current discussion is based on the empirical
    evidence.

39
The Problem of Classification (Reinhart and
Rogoff, 2004)
  • In practice, exchange rate regimes often differed
    from what they were officially announced to be.
  • Freely falling exchange rates should be taken
    into account seperately.
  • Solution
  • Natural Classification (5 main categories)
  • Fixed
  • Limited Flexibility
  • Managed Floating
  • Freely Floating
  • Freely Falling

40
Empirical Evidence-Conclusions
  • Empirical evidence depends entirely on
    classification. Taking into account Natural
    Classification Rogoff et al (2003) concludes
  • Corners Hypothesis-Bipolar view finds less
    support
  • Intermediate regimes are more durable
  • As economies mature, the degree of exchange rate
    flexibility rises
  • Developing Countries
  • Superior performance of pegged regimes with
    commitment through public announcement
  • Emerging Markets
  • Need to consider adopting more flexible
    exchange rate regimes as they develop
    economically and institutionally (Goldstein, 2002
    suggests managed floating plus)
  • Advanced Countries
  • Free floats registed better performance

41
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42
No single currency regime is right for all
countries or at all timesFrankel, 1999
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