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1. What is the difference between fixed exchange rates and floating exchange rates? 2. How do countries choose different exchange rate regimes? What considerations are taken into account?
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1. Nominal Exchange Rates: determined by s____________& d_________ 2. G______________ have more power to influence nominal exchange rates than prices. 3. Exchange rates are important to countries where exports and imports are a large portion of _______. 4. Can a nation deliberately manipulate the exchange rate of its own currency to achieve certain economic goals? Why would the government do this?
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1. Nominal Exchange Rates: determined by supply & demand 2. Governments have more power to influence nominal exchange rates than other prices. 3. Exchange rates are important to countries where exports and imports are a large portion of GDP. 4. Can a nation deliberately manipulate the exchange rate of its own currency to achieve certain economic goals? Why would the government do this?
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1.Exchange Rate Regime: 2.Fixed Exchange Rate: 3.Example: Hong Kong has an official policy of setting an exchange rate of HK$7.80 per US$1. 4.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnAT7FZpmg0&safety_ mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=activehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnAT7FZpmg0&safety_ mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active 5.Floating Exchange Rate: 6.Examples: 7."Managed" & "Target Zone"
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1.Exchange Rate Regime: rule governing policy toward the exchange rate. 2.Fixed Exchange Rate: keeps the exchange rate against some other currency at or near a particular target. 3.Example: Hong Kong has an official policy of setting an exchange rate of HK$7.80 per US$1. 4.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnAT7FZpmg0&safety_ mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=activehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnAT7FZpmg0&safety_ mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active 5.Floating Exchange Rate: government lets the exchange rate go wherever the market takes it 6.Examples: Britain, Canada, and the United States 7."Managed" & "Target Zone"
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Exchange Market Intervention Foreign Exchange Reserves Foreign Exchange Controls
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Exchange Market Intervention Buy up the surplus of Yuan in the foreign exchange market. Governments keep foreign exchange reserves, or stocks of foreign currencies, so that they can do just this. Foreign Exchange Reserves Shift either the demand or supply curves so that the exchange price rises. Chinese policymakers can increase interest rates to attract foreign capital investment, increasing the demand for the Yuan, reducing the capital outflow from China, reducing the supply of Yuan, and the price of the Yuan will begin to rise. Foreign Exchange Controls The government can limit the right of individuals to buy foreign currency. (must have a license purchase dollars, thus reducing the supply of the yuan.) The price will begin to rise.
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China fixes their currency, the Yuan, at a rate of $1 US for every 6 Yuan. If the Yuan is exchanged in a free market, the equilibrium exchange rate may be higher, or lower, than the target rate of $1 (which is what they are afraid of) What can the government of China do to get equilibrium where they want it? 1. Buy up the surplus of Yuan in the foreign exchange market (exchange market intervention.) Governments keep foreign exchange reserves, or stocks of foreign currencies, so that they can do just this. 2. Shift either the demand or supply curves so that the price rises to the target of $1. Chinese policymakers can increase interest rates to attract foreign capital investment, increasing the demand for the yuan, reducing the capital outflow from China, reducing the supply of yuan, and the price of the Yuan will begin to rise. 3. The government can limit the right of individuals to buy foreign currency. (must have a license purchase dollars, thus reducing the supply of the yuan.) The price will begin to rise. What can the government of China do to get equilibrium down where they want it? 1. Sell yuan in the foreign exchange market. 2. Chinese policymakers can decrease interest rates. This will decrease foreign capital investment, decreasing the demand for the yuan. This will also increase the capital outflow from China, increasing the supply of yuan. The price of the yuan will begin to fall. 3. The government can limit the ability of foreigners to buy the yuan. The price will begin to fall. But is it actually a good idea to fix the exchange rate?
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The Case for Fixed Exchange Rates Facilitates trade by creating certainty about the exchange rate Acts as a check on inflationary policies: The bank adheres to the exchange rate regime, so they cannot dramatically increase the money supply. If they did, this would cause inflation & reduce the value of the currency. (more stability)
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The Case against Fixed Exchange Rates: The costs Requires large foreign currency reserves that may not be profitable May divert monetary policy from managing the inflation rate Distorts incentives for importing & exporting goods and services (because it is artificial) Opportunity for red tape & corruption http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1dDIrOCbUo&feature=fvwrel&saf ety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=activehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1dDIrOCbUo&feature=fvwrel&saf ety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active
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Module Review Questions p. 435-436 Read Module 44 p. 437-441
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