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1 ECONOMICS 3150M Winter 2014 Professor Lazar Office: N205J, Schulich flazar@yorku.ca 736-5068
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2 Lecture 10: February 10 Ch. 20, 21
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3 Fixed Exchange Rates: Policy Effectiveness B. of C. committed to maintaining value of exchange rate Consider case: If B. of C. commitment to fixed exchange rate credible [E*(e) – E*]/E* = 0 B. of C. loses control over R – any attempt to change R with no change in values of other variables, will impact E* Covered interest rate parity model: –R(C) = R(US) + since B. of C. considered credible –If R(C) –M determined by need to maintain R(C) = R(US) + and E* fixed –Monetary policy loses effectiveness with fixed exchange rates
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4 Fixed Exchange Rates: Policy Effectiveness B. of C. committed to maintaining value of exchange rate Consider case: Traditional D/S model in D for C$, in S of C$ –In absence of intervention, C$ depreciates in value (E ) –To keep exchange rate constant, B. of C. either M R or intervenes directly and buys C$ (sells foreign assets) –Consider direct intervention: requirement for foreign asset reserves Problem: can B. of C. persist in buying C$? Traders expect depreciation, so S of C$ compounds problem for B. of C.
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5 E Q(C$) D for C$: exports S of C$: imports Direct Intervention: Sell foreign assets E0E0 SD
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6 Fixed Exchange Rates Speculative attacks –Reserves –No-lose bets: short the exchange rate, short debt –Soros and UK pounds in early 1990s Loans in foreign currency (US$, Euro, Yen) –Forced devaluation – domestic currency costs of loan interest and principal payments increase –Default – problems for domestic banks
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7 Flexible Exchange Rates Independent monetary policy – not constrained by need to keep exchange rate fixed at particular level –Fiscal policy ineffective Expansionary policy R E EX and IM aggregate demand Combination of higher interest rates and appreciation of C$ neutralize expansionary effects of fiscal policy Ignoring effects on P and repercussions on aggregate D Degree of independence –US M to stimulate economy and reduce UR (Canadian policy-makers likely to have same objective) US actions will lead to appreciation of C$ ( in US GDP Canadian CU; and R(US) Canadian CA); which will reduce positive spillover effect from US Flexible rates will require B. of C. to follow lead of US Federal Reserve
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8 Flexible Exchange Rates Automatic stabilizer –Increase in rate of inflation in US R(C) = R(US) + [E*(e)-E*]/E* + [E*(e)-E*]/E* = % E*(e) = % P(C) - % P(US) Assume % P(C) = % P(US) = % P(D) = initially % E*(e) = 0 Now assume % P(US) % E*(e) < 0 E* (appreciation) P(C) = P(D) [P(US)E*] 1- % P(C) = % P(D) + (1- )[% P(US) + % E*(e)] % P(C) = If % P(US) % E* offsetting impact on % P(C) –With fixed exchange rates If % P(US) % P(C)
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9 Dollarization Problems with flexible exchange rates –Effectiveness of independent monetary policy –Trade costs –Competitiveness –Demand for bail-outs –Instability of foreign exchange markets: tendency to overshoot –78.5% appreciation in 5 years Problems with Dollarization –Loss of independent m.p. –Loss of automatic stabilizer –Economic performance and sovereignty
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10 Diversification Risk reduction –Same expected return, lower risk for portfolio –Higher expected return, same degree of risk –Risk aversion Risks: –Default –Price variability –Exchange rate –Imperfect information Insurance markets – financial and non-financial risks: –Spread risks: re-insurance, insurance pools –Pooling of risks: insurance pools –Derivatives
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11 Offshore Banking and Eurocurrencies Offshore banking –Business conducted by the foreign branches, subsidiaries of a bank outside the home country of the bank Eurocurrencies –Bank deposits denominated in a currency other than the domestic currency of the country in which the bank or its foreign operations reside Offshore currencies Typical Eurocurrency deposit is non-negotiable time deposit with fixed term to maturity ranging from overnight to 5+ years US$ deposits in a bank in Canada (Canadian, US, other) – part of Eurodollars – Eurodollars: US $ deposits in banks outside US C$ deposits in a bank outside of Canada (Canadian, other) –Eurobanks: banks that trade in market for Eurocurrencies – take deposits, make loans Most Eurocurrency trading occurs in non-European centers
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12 Eurocurrencies Euro-deposit rates – 3 months 08/26/0908/24/0807/14/08 U.S.0.30%5.48%2.81% Canada0.504.833.20 Euro0.844.654.90 Yen0.280.970.87 Pound0.526.495.65
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Euro Deposit Rates Today 3-month rates: US: 0.35% Canada: 1.35% Euro: 1.33% Yen: 0.10% Pound: 0.96% 13
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14 Rapid Growth of International Banking Reduction in trade costs growth in international trade –Hedging currency risks Liberalization of capital markets –Growth of MNEs – banks have followed corporate customers abroad Circumvent restrictive domestic government regulations on financial activity – reserve requirements, interest rate ceilings, deposit insurance Political factors – desire by some depositors to hold currencies outside jurisdiction of countries that issue them – freezing accounts Money laundering – drugs, arms sales, bribes, other criminal activities
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