EXCHANGE-RATE TARGETING IN MONETARY POLIC

 0    33 flashcards    bumbum2
download mp3 print play test yourself
 
Question English Answer English
What is fixed (pegged) exchange-rate system?
start learning
is a currency system in which the main goal of the monetary policy (thus the central bank) is to keep currency value constant against some external target
What are external targets in this system?
start learning
a fixed weight of gold, or a fixed amount of another currency, or a basket of other currencies.
What is the relation between central bank and currencies?
start learning
The central bank of a country remains committed at all times to buy and sell its currency at a fixed price, i.e. the central value or par value of a given currency. The central bank provides foreign currency needed to finance payments imbalances.
What are exchange rate regimes?
start learning
Hard pegs regimes; floating regimes; soft pegs
What is the market equilibrium exchange rate?
start learning
is the rate at which supply and demand will be equal, i.e., markets will clear. In a flexible exchange rate system, this is the spot rate.
Why the foreign central banks maintain reserves of foreign currencies?
start learning
hey can sell in order to intervene in the foreign exchange market to make up the excess demand or take up the excess supply.
Types of fixed exchange rate systems?
start learning
The gold standard; Gold exchange standard; Reserve currency standard; Currency board; Dollarization/euroization; Hybrid exchange rate systems; Mixed-target monetary policy systems
What types of pegs do we recognise?
start learning
Fixed single-currency peg; Basket-of-currencies peg; Pegged within a band; Crawling band/crawling peg
what is a pure gold standard?
start learning
a country’s government declares to exchange its currency for a certain weight in gold.
What is the rule of exchange?
start learning
anyone may go to the central bank and exchange coins or currency for with pure gold or vice versa at the designated exchange rate.
what are the assumptions and conditions of the gold standard?
start learning
assumptions: there are no restrictions on capital movements or export of gold by private citizens across countries; conditions: central bank maintains sufficient gold reserves
What is the gold exchange standard?
start learning
it is a mixture of a reserve currency standard and a gold standard. In this system there was a reserve currency country, which fixed its currency value to a fixed weight in gold and agreed to exchange its own currency for gold with other central banks upon demand. All non-reserve countries agreed to fix their exchange rates to the chosen currency reserve at some announced rate.
What are the assumptions and conditions of exchange gold standard?
start learning
assumptions: there are no restrictions on capital movements or export of gold by private citizens across countries; conditions: currency reserve central bank maintains sufficient gold reserves and non-reserve central banks hold sufficient stock of reserve currency assets
What is the reserve currency system?
start learning
In a reserve currency system, a country fixes its own currency value to a unit of another currency (currencies), most often a currency that is prominently used in international transactions or is the currency of a major trading partner.
What are the assumptions and conditions of reserve currency system?
start learning
assumptions: there are no restrictions on capital movements by private citizens across countries. conditions: central bank maintains sufficient foreign (reserve) currency reserves in one or more currencies
What is a currency board?
start learning
the most widespread means of fixed exchange rates, effectively replaces the central bank through a legislation to fix the currency to that of another country
What are assumptions and conditions of a currency board?
start learning
assumprtions: interest rate parity conditions: maintenance of adequate reserves of the anchor currency, perceptible actual access to exchange of the domestic currency at the fixed rate
WHat is dollarization/euroization?
start learning
This is the most extreme and rigid manner of fixing exchange rates as it entails adopting the currency of another country in place of its own.
What are hybrid exchange rate systems?
start learning
They combine the characteristics features of fixed and flexible exchange rate systems. They allow fluctuation of the exchange rates without completely exposing the currency to the flexibility of a free float?
What are mixed-target monetary policy systems?
start learning
are systems where the inflation target is maintained by a central bank alongside the exchange-rate target, the exchange rate target is defined either as a fixed rate or as a fluctuation band
What is pegged within a band?
start learning
In this regime the central bank specifies a central exchange rate as a reference (to a single currency or a currency composite), but also specifies a percentage allowable deviation on both sides of this central rate (fixed or crawling band). Depending on the band’s size, the central bank has discretion in carrying out its monetary policy.
What is a currency basket?
start learning
is a portfolio of selected currencies with different weightings. A currency basket is commonly used to minimize the risk of currency fluctuations. An example of a currency basket is the European Currency Unit (ECU) that was used by the European Community member states as the unit of account before being replaced by the euro.
What is crawling band/peg?
start learning
A system of exchange rate adjustments in which a currency with a fixed exchange rate is fixed (peg) or allowed to fluctuate within a band of rates. The par value of the stated currency is also adjusted frequently due to market factors such as inflation.
What crawling band/peg is done for?
start learning
is done as an alternative to a sudden and significant revaluation of the currency (and helps to avoid excessive intervening in the market).
What is ERM?
start learning
was a system introduced by the European Community in March 1979, as part of the European Monetary System (EMS), to reduce exchange rate variability and achieve monetary stability in Europe, in preparation for Economic and Monetary Union and the introduction of a single currency, the euro, which took place on 1 January 1999.
What ERM is based on?
start learning
is based on the concept of fixed currency exchange rate margins, but with exchange rates variable within those margins. This is also known as a semi-pegged system. Before the introduction of the euro, exchange rates were based on the European Currency Unit(ECU), the European unit of account, whose value was determined as a weighted average of the participating currencies.
What is the parity grid?
start learning
A grid of bilateral rates calculated on the basis of the central rates expressed in ECUs, and currency fluctuations had to be contained within a margin of 2.25% on either side of the bilateral rates.
What was the problem with the parity grid?
start learning
In August 1993, the margin had to be expanded to 15% to accommodate speculation against the French franc and other currencies.
What protected the participating currencies from greater exchange rate fluctuations?
start learning
Determined intervention and loan arrangements
What any currency is allowed to in ERM(II)?
start learning
any currency in ERM (II) is allowed to float within a range of ±15% with respect to a central rate against the euro.
What is the main requirement before adopting the euro?
start learning
At least two years in the ERM II before joining the Eurozone
What is the earliest date when Hungary will adopt euro?
start learning
2015
What is convertible mark?
start learning
operating also under a currency board, is the currency of Bosnia and Herzegovina and it was fixed to 1 German mark when it was introduced on the basis of the Dayton agreement

You must sign in to write a comment