What are the costs and benefits of fixing the FX rate or
keeping it within a narrow band?
Problems ensue when the central bank runs out of reserves,
as it did in Thailand in 1997. The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) often provides loans to countries attempting to defend the
value of their currencies. It doesn’t really act as an
international lender of last resort, however, because it doesn’t
follow Hamilton’s née Bagehot’s Law. It simply has no mechanism for
adding liquidity quickly, and the longer one waits, the bigger the
eventual bill. Moreover, the IMF often forces borrowers to undergo
fiscal austerity programs (high government taxes, decreased
expenditures, high domestic interest rates, and so forth) that can
create as much economic pain as a rapid depreciation would.
Finally, it has created a major moral hazard problem, repeatedly
lending to the same few countries, which quickly learned that they
need not engage in responsible policies in the long run because the
IMF would be sure to help out if they got into trouble. Sometimes
the medicine is indeed worse than the disease!
Trouble can also arise when a central bank no longer wants
to accumulate international reserves (or indeed any assets) because
it wants to squelch domestic inflation, as it did in Germany in
1990–1992. Many fear that China, which currently owns over $1
trillion in international reserves (mostly USD), will find itself
in this conundrum soon. The Chinese government accumulated such a
huge amount of reserves by fixing its currency (which confusingly
goes by two names, the yuan and the renminbi, but one symbol, CNY)
at the rate of CNY8.28 per USD. Due to the growth of the Chinese
economy relative to the U.S. economy, E* exceeded Epeg,
inducing the Chinese, per the analysis above, to sell CNY for
international reserves to keep the yuan permanently weak, or
undervalued relative to the value the market would have assigned
it.
Recall that undervaluing the yuan helps Chinese exports by
making them appear cheap to foreigners. (If you don’t believe me,
walk into any Wal-Mart, Target, or other discount store.) Many
people think that China’s peg is unfair, a monetary form of dirty
pool. Such folks need to realize that there is no such thing
as a free lunch. To maintain its peg, the Chinese government has
severely restricted international capital mobility via currency
controls, thereby injuring the efficiency of Chinese financial
markets, limiting foreign direct investment, and encouraging mass
loophole mining. It is also stuck with a trillion bucks of
relatively low-yielding international reserves that will decline in
value when the yuan floats (and probably appreciates strongly), as
it eventually must. In other words, China is setting itself up
for the exact opposite of the Southeast Asian Crisis of 1997–1998,
where the value of its assets will plummet instead of the value of
its liabilities skyrocketing.
In China’s defense, many developing countries find it
advantageous to peg their exchange rates to the dollar, the yen,
the euro, the pound sterling, or a basket of such important
currencies. The peg, which can be thought of as a monetary
policy target similar to an inflation or money supply target,
allows the developing nation’s central bank to figure out whether
to increase or decrease MB and by how much. A hard peg or narrow
band effectively ties the domestic inflation rate to that of the
anchor country, As noted in Chapter 18 "Foreign
Exchange", however, not all goods and services are traded
internationally, so the rates will not be exactly equal.
instilling confidence in the developing country’s macroeconomic
performance.
Indeed, in extreme cases, some countries have given up their
central bank altogether and have dollarized, adopting USD or other
currencies (though the process is still called dollarization) as
their own. No international law prevents this, and indeed the
country whose currency is adopted earns seigniorage and hence has
little grounds for complaint. Countries that want to completely
outsource their monetary policy but maintain seigniorage revenue
(the profits from the issuance of money) adopt a currency board
that issues domestic currency but backs it 100 percent with assets
denominated in the anchor currency. (The board invests the reserves
in interest-bearing assets, the source of the seigniorage.)
Argentina benefited from just such a board during the 1990s, when
it pegged its peso one-to-one with the dollar, because it finally
got inflation, which often ran over 100 percent per year, under
control.
Fixed exchange rates not based on commodities like gold or
silver are notoriously fragile, however, because relative
macroeconomic changes in interest rates, trade, and productivity
can create persistent imbalances over time between the developing
and the anchor currencies. Moreover, speculators can force
countries to devalue (move Epeg down) or revalue (move
Epeg up) when they hit the bottom or top of a band. They
do so by using the derivatives markets to place big bets on the
future exchange rate. Unlike most bets, these are one-sided because
the speculators lose little money if the central bank successfully
defends the peg, but they win a lot if it fails to. Speculator
George Soros, for example, is reported to have made $1 billion
speculating against the pound sterling during the ERM balance of
payments crisis in September 1992. Such crises can cause tremendous
economic pain, as when Argentina found it necessary to abandon its
currency board and one-to-one peg with the dollar in 2001–2002 due
to speculative pressures and fundamental macroeconomic misalignment
between the Argentine and U.S. economies. (Basically, the United
States was booming and Argentina was in a recession. The former
needed higher interest rates/slower money growth and the latter
needed lower interest rates/higher money growth.)
Developing countries may be best off maintaining what is
called a crawling target or crawling peg. Generally, this
entails the developing country’s central bank allowing its domestic
currency to depreciate or appreciate over time, as general
macroeconomic conditions (the variables discussed in Chapter 18
"Foreign Exchange") dictate. A similar strategy is to recognize
imbalances as they occur and change the peg on an ad hoc basis
accordingly, perhaps first by allowing the band to widen before
permanently moving it. In those ways, developing countries can
maintain some FX rate stability, keep inflation in check (though
perhaps higher than in the anchor country), and hopefully avoid
exchange rate crises.
Stop and Think Box
What sort of international monetary
regimes are consistent with Figure 19.7 and Figure 19.8 ?
Figure 19.7 certainly is not a fixed
exchange rate regime, or a managed float with a tight band. It
could be consistent with a fully free float, but it might also
represent a managed float with wide bands between about ¥100 to
¥145 per dollar.
It appears highly likely from Figure
19.8 that Hong Kong’s monetary authority for most of the period
from 1984 to 2007 engaged in a managed float within fairly tight
bands bounded by about HK7.725 and HK7.80 to the dollar. Also, for
three years early in the new millennium, it pegged the dollar at
HK7.80 before returning to a looser but still tight band in
2004.
key takeaways
A country with weak institutions (e.g., a dependent central
bank that allows rampant inflation) can essentially free-ride on
the monetary policy of a developed country by fixing or pegging its
currency to the dollar, euro, yen, pound sterling, or other
anchoring currency to a greater or lesser degree.
In fact, in the limit, a country can simply adopt another
country’s currency as its own in a process called
dollarization.
If it wants to continue earning seigniorage (profits from the
issuance of money), it can create a currency board, the function of
which is to maintain 100 percent reserves and full convertibility
between the domestic currency and the anchor currency.
At the other extreme, it can create a crawling peg with wide
bands, allowing its currency to appreciate or depreciate day to day
according to the interaction of supply and demand, slowly adjusting
the band and peg in the long term as macroeconomic conditions
dictate.
When a currency is overvalued, which is to say, when the
central bank sets Epeg higher than E* (when E is
expressed as foreign currency/domestic currency), the central bank
must appreciate the currency by selling international reserves for
its domestic currency.
It may run out of reserves before doing so, however, sparking a
rapid depreciation that could trigger a financial crisis by rapidly
increasing the real value of debts owed by domestic residents but
denominated in foreign currencies.
When a currency is undervalued, which is to say, when the
central bank sets Epeg below E*, the central bank must
depreciate its domestic currency by exchanging it for international
reserves. It may accumulate too many such reserves, which often
have low yields and which could quickly lose value if the domestic
currency suddenly appreciates, perhaps with the aid of a good push
by currency speculators making big one-sided bets.