WEEK 2 - International Monetary Arrangements Flashcards

1
Q

What are the differing historical monetary arrangements?

A
Gold Standard (1880-1914)
Inter-war period (1918-40)
Bretton Woods (1944-70)
Transition Years (1971-73)
Post Bretton Woods (1973-Present)
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2
Q

What is the Gold Standard?

A

Currencies fixed price relative to gold

e. g at the time, one ounce of gold $20.67
- Required commitment from participants to buy/sell gold to anyone at fixed price

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3
Q

How did the Gold Standard create an exchange rate?

A

e.g.
$ fixed to gold
£ fixed to gold
So exchange rate $ per £ also fixed

Suppose
$1 = 1/2 ounce of gold
£1 = 1 ounce of gold
-> S £/$ = 2 (£1=$2)

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4
Q

Why use gold?

A
  1. History of gold (Linking back to Mesopotamia)
  2. Homogneous Commodity, Easily Storable, Portable and Divisible
  3. Relatively fixed supply -> So not many flucuations
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5
Q

Why did the Gold Standard see stable levels of inflation?

A

Supply and Inflation depended on gold mining

- In SR, Price flucuations in LR relatively stable since gold mining infrequent

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6
Q

How did the gold standard solve BoP disequilibriums and with it issues of new gold?

A

TRADE SURPLUS -> NET INFLOW OF GOLD -> MONEY SUPPLY UP -> INFLATION -> RISE IN PRICE -> NX DOWN -> REDUCE SURPLUS

TRADE DEFICIT -> NET OUTFLOW OF GOLD -> MONEY SUPPLY DOWN -> FALL IN PRICE-> NX UP -> REDUCE DEFICIT

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7
Q

Why did the GS end?

A

1ST TIME:

  • WWI -> Patriotism among other reasons meant gold lending restricted -> Exchange rates floating
  • > Rapid inflation -> Not possible to have GS at old rates

2ND TIME:
- England returned GS at pre-war lvls even though new inflation lvls -> So £ overvalued

£ overvalued = Exports down = Trade Deficits = Gold left country = Loss of confidence and run on gold
1931 -> UK gold inconvertible

  • US great depression led to low interest rates and thus run on gold -> Lack of monetary control downward spiral on econ so 1933 US declare gold inconvertible
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8
Q

What was the need for the Bretton Woods System (1944-70)?

A

Need for a system that fixes currencies relative to each other but not to fix to gold (too restrictive)

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9
Q

How did the Bretton Woods system work? (pt 1)

A

Agreed to anchor value to the dollar and then dollar fixed to gold = $1 = 1/35 ounce of gold

  • Only central banks could convert dollars to gold
  • Pressure for US to not inflate $ too much
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10
Q

How did the Bretton Woods System work (PT 2)

A
  • IMF created to smoothe the system
  • To create some flexibility to attain external balance while allowing for internal balance and stable exchange

VIA:

  1. Loans
  2. Devaluations (if a fundamental disequilibrium)
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11
Q

How did the loan system work?

A

Loans based on funds paid for by member countries
Each country had quota, determining contribution and amount to borrow
- Large loans -> With conditionalities (Washington Consensus)

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12
Q

What were some new features of the Bretton Woods system?

A

Currencies allowed to trade amongst themselves

  • i.e Trade Franc with £ but not $
  • > To facilitate flows of goods and services -> i.e Trade benefits all
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13
Q

Why did the Bretton Woods System cause asymmetry in policy?

A
  • Monetary policy useless for all except USA
  • Only fiscal policy could be used -> But fiscal policy only impacts internal balance (CIG)
  • Only devaluations could target the whole economy and cover external and internal imbalances (CIG(X-M))

-> Infrequent devaluations meant politicians would often run up huge external imbalances focusing only on internal balance for political reasons

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14
Q

How is currency fixed in the Bretton Woods system?

A

SEE GRAPH IN NOTES

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15
Q

Why did the system fail?

A
  1. Speculative attacks would cause states to outrun supply of dollars and could no longer match
  2. Combination of large BoP deficits in the US and refusal to enact deflationary measures
  3. Increased trade meant higher growth rates and with it meant there wasn’t enough gold to match new growth -> Countries would trade on dollar denominated assets with flexible supply
  4. Trade Unions -> More income, higher imports etc, growth increase and with it outstripped gold agsin
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16
Q

Why was the US response to its deficits such a key reason to its failure

A

States with surpluses questioning the true value of the dollar to gold.
States like Japan would devalue the Yen to peg to an overvalued dollar.
In fear of run on gold, Nixon suspended convertibility and added a 10% tariff.
This retaliatory policy led to major currencies beginning to float.

17
Q

What is the SDR?

A

Special Drawing Rights

  • > Issued by IMF to try and help support Bretton woods and lack of gold
  • > SDR still exists
18
Q

How did the world come to differing monetary arrangements?

A
  • 1975 -> members of IMF meet in France to allow flexible exchange rates but avoid erratic fluctuations
  • 1976 -> In Kingston ammend IMF membership to formally endorse flexible BUT no manipulating exchange rates
19
Q

Why is the US still the most dominant reserve currency?

A

Other countries resist greater roles as could mess with monetary policy

20
Q

What are the cases for Floating Rates?

A
  1. Monetary Policy autonomy:
    Can influence interest rates to great effect
  2. Automatic Stabilisation: Automatically adjust to high or low AD and output, keeping output closer to normal lvl and stabilising price in LR
  3. Flexible Exchange rate may prevent speculation in some cases
  4. Symmetry
21
Q

What is the scale of the differing monetary arrangements?

A

SEE IN NOTES

22
Q

Who fixes their exchange rates?

A

SMALL ECONOMY
OPEN ECONOMY
HIGHLY CONCENTRATED TRADE
HARMONIOUS INFLATION RATES (SIMILAR MONETARY TO COUNTRY THEY PEG TO)

23
Q

Who Floats?

A

LARGE ECONOMY
CLOSED ECONOMY
HIGHLY DIVERSIFIED TRADE
DIVERGENT INFLATION RATES (Remain independent monetary policy)

24
Q

What is a Standard Peg?

A

Fix Domestic currency with 1 or basket of foreign currencies

25
Q

BENEFITS AND WEAKNESSES

A

B:
Limit exchange rate flucuations

W:

  • Limit ability to use domestic monetary policy
  • Attract speculative attacks on currency
26
Q

How to peg?

A

Suppose Peso fixed to $ at 0.5 = 1 peso
- Increase in demand for US products from Mexico. Supply of Peso up

  • CB of Mexico have to intervene to peg rate
    Buy peso to sell dollars -> Dollar reserves go down

SEE GRAPH IN NOTES

27
Q

Speculative attack on peg?

A

Speculators keep attacking at supply -> Have to keep pegging-> Run out of dollar reserves

SEE GRAPH IN NOTES

28
Q

What is Dollarisation?

A

Adopt someone else’s currency ($) to use

  • Brings in stability both on currency level and on institutional since have to match US monetary institutions now
29
Q

What is a currency board?

A

Fix exchange rate with other currency with 100% foreign reserve backing in central bank

E.G.
HK if 8 HKD = 1 USD, then 800 bn of HKD in circulation will neeed 100 bn of USD reserves

30
Q

What are Target bands?

A

Rate allowed to vary within official set bands

  • If wanders too far, CB has to intervene
  • Comes with more negative of floating and fixed than positives

European ERM is a good example here

31
Q

What is a Optimum Currency Area?

A

An optimal currency area is wherein a geographical area benefits from economic strength by adopting a single currency, the EU being the best example.

32
Q

What are the 4 conditions for a stable OCA by Mundell?

A
  1. High Labour mobility
  2. Capital Mobility and wage flexibility to allow for even distribution of flows of labour and to dampen economic shocks.
  3. A currency risk-sharing or fiscal mechanism that shares risk via transferring money from countries with a budget surplus to those with a deficit.
  4. Similar business cycles to allow for joint monetary policy