Monetaries Policy and Exchange Rate Flashcards

1
Q

Rising Confidence in Boversia (graph)(imaginary country)

A
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2
Q

what relationship capture the Phillips curve?

A
  • output affect inflation
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3
Q

Rising Confidence and Output Stabilization (graph)

A
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4
Q

Effects on Components of Spending (graph)

A
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5
Q

Exchange Rate Policies and Their Pitfalls (graph)

A
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6
Q

A Domestic Shock and Output Stabilization (graph)

A
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7
Q

Definition of Foreign exchange interventions by the central bank:

A
  • purchases and sales of foreign currencies by central banks
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8
Q

Definition of International reserves by the central bank:

A
  • liquid assets held by central banks that are denominated in foreign currencies
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9
Q

Foreign Exchange Interventions and International Reserves (order)(graph)

A
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10
Q

Interventions and the Exchange Rate (graph)

A
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11
Q

Why the central bank intervene in the exchange rate?

A

The motive for foreign exchange interventions is to escape this dilemma. Interventions allow policymakers to stabilize output and the exchange rate at the same time.

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12
Q

Do exchange rate intervation work ? (againts it)

A
  • Yes, but little and/or unreliable
  • The size of interventions suggests that the shifts are slight and the effects on exchange rates are small.
  • Interventions can’t offset major shocks such as capital flight, as we’ve assumed up to now.
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13
Q

Do exchange rate intervation work ? (in favor)

A
  • Yet not all economists dismiss interventions.
  • Some suggest that interventions can change exchange rates even if they are small
  • Interventions signal central banks’ desire to adjust exchange rates (Expectations of future exchange rate movements affect current rates.)
  • trigger self-fulfilling expectations
  • Fatum and Hutchinson (University of California) concluded that interventions do influence exchange rates.
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14
Q

Definitions of Capital controls:

A
  • Regulations that restrict capital inflows or outflows
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15
Q

Capital Controls and the Exchange Rate (graph)(effects)

A
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16
Q

what are the Effects on Exchange Rates of capital control?

A
  • Avoid capital flight
  • Countries use capital controls for the same reason that they use foreign exchange interventions: to ease the trade-off between output and exchange rate stability.
  • This stabilizes the exchange rate without an interest rate adjustment that would destabilize output.
17
Q

what critique have the Capital Controls system?

A
  • Restrictions on capital inflows make it harder for a country’s firms to finance investment.
  • Restrictions on outflows prevent savers from earning high returns on foreign assets. In general, capital controls impede the flow of savings to the countries where savings are most productive.
  • Critics argue that controls hurt the economy in the long run by reducing foreign investment.

Foreigners won’t put money in a country if the government might prevent them from taking it back out.

18
Q

with what policies china had to controlled its exchange rate?

A
  • restrictions on capital inflows
  • foreign exchange interventions
19
Q

Definition of Floating exchange rate:

A
  • A policy that allows the exchange rate to fluctuate in response to economic shocks
20
Q

Definition of Fixed exchange rate

A
  • A policy that holds the exchange rate at a constant level
21
Q

A Fixed Exchange Rate: Pros and Cons (graph)

A
22
Q

Definition of Devaluation:

A
  • resetting of a fixed exchange rate at a lower level
  • When a country has a fixed exchange rate,
23
Q

Definition of Revaluation:

A
  • resetting of a fixed exchange rate at a higher level
24
Q

Fixed Exchange Rates and Inflation (graph)

A
25
Q

The Instability of Fixed Exchange Rates (graph)

A
26
Q

Definition of Speculative attack: (Currency speculators)

A
  • strategy of selling a currency with a fixed exchange rate to force and to profit from a devaluation
27
Q

what was the The Bretton Woods System?

A
  • Under this system, all currencies were fixed against the dollar.
  • Fixed rates were maintained through a combination of interest rate adjustments, capital controls, and interventions.
28
Q

what Compared advantage have a common currency system compare to a traditional fixed-rate system ?

A
  • A currency union creates absolute fixity of exchange rates
  • A currency union eliminates the costs of changing currencies
  • A common currency helps people compare prices across different countries.
29
Q

what undesirable charateristic have the One-Size-Fits-All Policy?

A
  • The main drawback of a currency union is the basic problem with fixed exchange rates: the loss of national monetary policy.