Ch.9 The Exchange Rate
Interest rate parity
A currency is worth what it can earn. The return on a currency is the interest rate on that currency plus the expected rate of appreciation over a given period. When the rate of returns on two currencies are equal, interest rate parity prevails. **means equal interest rates when exchange rate changes are taken into account** Market forces achieve interest rate parity very quickly
Changes in the Supply of Dollars
a change in any influence on the quantity of US dollars that people plan to sell, other than the exchange rate, brings a change in the supply of dollars
Currency depreciation
a fall in the value of one currency in terms of another currency
Currency appreciation
a rise in value of one currency in terms of another currency
Crawling peg
an exchange rate that follows a path determined by a decision of the government or the central bank and is achieved by active intervention in the market China is a country that operates a crawling peg A crawling peg works like a fixed exchange rate except that the target value changes The idea behind a crawling peg is to avoid wild swings in the exchange rate that might happen if expectations became volatile and to avoid the problem of running out of reserves, which can happen with a fixed exchange rate.
The expected future exchange rate- demand
at a given current exchange rate, if expected future exchange rate for US dollars rises, the demand for US dollars increases and the demand curve for dollars shifts rightward
The expected future exchange rate- supply
at a given current exchange rate, if the expected future exchange rate for US dollars rises, the supply of US dollars decreases and the supply curve of US dollars shifts leftward
US demand for Imports
at a given exchange rate, if the US demand for imports increases, the supply of US dollars on the foreign exchange market increases and the supply curve of US dollars shifts rightward
2 reasons why the exchange rate influences the quantity of US dollars demanded
exports effect, expected profit effect
3 possible exchange rate policies
flexible exchange rate, fixed exchange rate, crawling peg
Expected profit effect- supply
for a given expected future US dollar exchange rate, the lower the current exchange rate, the greater is the expected profit from holding US dollars, and the smaller is the quantity of US dollars supplied on the foreign exchange market
Foreign currency
foreign bank notes, coins, and bank deposits
Expectations about the exchange rate
*the exchange rate changes when its expected to change driven by: interest rate parity, purchasing power parity
Purchasing power parity
A currency is worth the value of goods and services that it will buy. The quantity of goods and services that one unit of a particular currency will buy differs from the quantity of goods and services that one unit of another currency will buy. When two quantities of money can buy the same quantity of goods and services, the situation is called purchasing power parity, which means **equal value of money**
Changes in the Exchange rate
If demand for US dollars increases and supply does not change, the exchange rate rises. If demand for US dollars decreases and supply does not change, the exchange rate falls. If supply of US dollars increases and demand does not change, the exchange rate falls. If supply of US dollars decreases and demand does not change, the exchange rate rises.
Market Equilibrium
If the exchange rate is too high, a surplus of US dollars drives it down. If the exchange rate is too low, a shortage if US dollars drives it up. The market is pulled (quickly) to the equilibrium exchange rate at which there is neither a shortage nor a surplus.
The Law of Supply of Foreign Exchange
Other things remaining the same, the higher the exchange rate, the greater is the quantity of US dollars supplied in the foreign exchange rate
The Law of Demand for Foreign Exchange Rate
People buy US dollars so they can buy US produced goods and services or US assets Other things remaining the same, the higher the exchange rate, the smaller is the quantity of US dollars demanded in the foreign market
RER in the long run
RER is determined by the real forces of demand and supply in the market for goods and services. E= RER x (P*÷P) a rise in the foreign price level P* brings an appreciation of the US dollar in the long run A rise in the US price level P brings a depreciation of the US dollar in the long run
Factors that influence the supply of Dollars
US demand for imports, US interest rates relative to the foreign interest rate, the expected future exchange rate
World demand for US exports
at a given exchange rate, if world demand for US exports increases, the demand for US dollars increases and the demand curve for US dollars shifts rightward
US interest rate relative to the foreign interest rate- demand
if the US interest differential rises, the demand for US dollars increases and the demand curve for US dollars shifts rightward
US interest rate relative to the foreign interest rate- supply
if the US interest differential rises, the supply of US dollars decreases and the supply curve of US dollars shifts leftward
RER in the short run
if the nominal exchange rate changes, P and P* do not change and the change in E brings an equivalent change in RER
2 reasons the exchange rate influences the quantity of US dollars supplied
imports effect, expected profits effect
Fixed exchange rate
policy that pegs the exchange rate at a value decided by the government or central bank and is achieved by direct intervention in the foreign exchange market to block unregulated forces of demand and supply *requires active intervention in the foreign exchange market
Flexible exchange rate
policy that permits the exchange rate to be determined by demand and supply with no direct intervention in the foreign exchange market by the central bank
US interest rate differential =
the US interest rate - the foreign exchange rate
the quantity of US dollars supplied depends on
the exchange rate, US demand for imports, interest rates in the US and other countries, the expected future exchange rate
Factors that determine the quantity of US dollars that traders plan to buy
the exchange rate, world demand for US exports, interest rates in the US and other countries, the expected future exchange rate
Expected profit effect- demand
the larger the expected profit from holding US dollars, the greater is the quantity of US dollars demanded today But expected profits depends on the exchange rate
Exports effect
the larger the value of US exports, the greater is the quantity of US dollars demanded on the foreign exchange market
Imports effect
the larger the value of US imports, the larger is the quantity of US dollars supplied on the foreign exchange market
Foreign exchange market
the market in which the currency of one country is exchanged for the currency of another
Foreign exchange rate
the price at which one currency exchanges for another
Supply in the foreign market
the quantity of US dollars supplied in the foreign exchange market is the amount that traders plan to sell during a given time period at a given exchange rate
Real exchange rate
the relative price of US- produced goods and services to foreign-produced goods and services measures the quantity of real GDP of other countries that a unit of US real GDP buys RER= (ExP)÷P* where E=exchange rate, P=US price level, and P*=foreign price level
Factors for change in the demand for US dollars in the foreign exchange market
world demand for US exports, US interest rate relative to the foreign interest rate, the expected future exchange rate