FIXED EXCHANGE RATE SYSTEM
Presented by
Mukesh Prasad
Roll No. 41
Presented to
Prof. Bhavadas
Economics of Global Trade And Finance
[Link]. Part I (Semester 2)
What is Fixed Exchange-rate System?
A system whereby the exchange rates of the member countries were
fixed against the U.S. dollar, with the dollar in turn worth a fixed
amount of gold.
Governments try to keep the value of their currencies constant against
one another.
The central bank of a country remains committed at all times to buy
and sell its currency at a fixed price.
The central bank provides foreign currency needed to finance
payments
imbalances.
Timeline of the fixed exchange rate system:
18801914
April 1925
October 1929
September 1931
July 1944
March 1947
Classical gold standard period
United Kingdom returns to gold standard
United States stock market crashes
United Kingdom abandons gold standard
Bretton Woods conference
International Monetary Fund comes into being
August 1971
United States suspends convertibility of dollar into
gold Bretton Woods system collapses
December 1971
Smithsonian Agreement
March 1972
European snake with 2.25% band of fluctuation
allowed
March 1973
April 1978
September 1985
Managed float regime comes into being
Jamaica Accords take effect
Plaza accord
September 1992
August 1993
United Kingdom and Italy abandon
Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM)
European Monetary System allows 15% fluctuation
in exchange rates
Types of Fixed Exchange Rate Systems
1. The Gold Standard
Under the gold standard, a countrys
government declares
that it will exchange its currency for a certain
weight in gold.
In a pure gold standard, a countrys government
declares
that it will freely exchange currency for actual
gold at the
designated exchange rate.
This "rule of exchange allows anyone to go the
2. Reserve Currency Standard
In a reserve currency system, the currency
of another country performs the functions
that gold has in a gold standard.
A country fixes its own currency value to a
unit of another countrys currency, generally
a currency that is prominently used in
international transactions or is the currency
of a major trading partner.
3. Gold Exchange Standard
A gold exchange standard is a mixture of a
reserve currency
standard and a gold standard. Its characteristics
are as follows:
All non-reserve countries agree to fix their
exchange rates to
the chosen reserve at some announced rate
and hold a
stock of reserve currency assets.
The reserve currency country fixes its currency
value to a
ADVANTAGES
May minimize instabilities in real economic
activity
Reduces volatility and fluctuations in
relative prices
It eliminates exchange rate risk by reducing
the
associated uncertainty
It imposes discipline on the monetary
DISADVANTAGES
Fixed exchange rate does not allow for
automatic
correction of imbalances in the nation's
balance of
payments
There exists the possibility of policy delays
and
mistakes in achieving external balance
The cost of government intervention is
imposed upon
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