Transcript Slide 1
THE INTERNATIONAL
MONETARY SYSTEM
THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
About the IMS
Brief History
High Level of Interdependence
Advantages of GN
IMS Issues
ABOUT THE IMS
ABOUT THE IMS
The
means for exchanging currency or money
between countries
Measures of monetary wealth of countries
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
Gross National Product (GNP)
Country
GDP (IMF 2012)
GDP per capita (IMF 2012
United States $16.24 T
China
$8.22 T
Japan
$5.96 T
$51,704
$6,071
$46,707
India
Germany
EU
$4,000
$41,866
$32,518
$1.84 T
$3.45 T
$16.67 T
ABOUT THE IMS
Big Mac Index
About it
Tracks inflation
Over/undervalued currency
Shows purchasing power
¤
ABOUT THE IMS
Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
Compares buying power from market to market
GN currencies = more buying power
Country
Price
Currency Exchange Rate
U.S.
Wooden baseball bat US $40
US $1 buys 10 MXN $
Mexico
Wooden baseball bat MXN $15
US$ buys 2 2/3 bats in Mexico
Effect:
1) Exchange US $ for MSX $, go to Mexico
Peso increases in value relative to dollar
2) US demand drops; MX demand increases
US price drops; MX price increases
3) Market should adjust over time
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Lose incentive to cross border
ABOUT THE IMS
About currency adjustments
Devaluing a currency
Strengthening it
Buying up currency so less is in circulation
Imports less expensive
Exports less appealing
Redenomination of a currency
¤
Intentionally make it weaker
Imports more expensive
Exports more appealing
Russian 1998- ruble revalued
ABOUT THE IMS
Currency adjustment effects
Weak yen= expensive luxury brands in Japan
Weak euro= more investment in non-euros
Denmark, Switzerland drop interest rates below 0%
Strong Swiss franc = higher interest payments
¤
“Hermes Warned of Lower Profits under Abenomics”
Mortgage borrowers in Poland suffer
BRIEF HISTORY
BASIS FOR MODERN SYSTEM
European exploration, colonization
British domination
Gold Standard
Gresham’s Law
Clipping, altered alloy content
Bad $ drives out good
Significance
Set equivalence
Established fixed exchange rates
•Provided stability
Post-WWII-US
¤
hegemony
POST WWII
Why did the US assume hegemony after
WWII?
Democracy
Trade partners
Allies
¤
POST WWII
How did the US promote economic hegemony?
US
Central banker
Gold standard
1840 to ~WWI based on £
1944 on $
•US$35=1 oz. gold
Foreign
Aid: IGOs, Bilateral
Marshall Plan, Truman Plan, IBRD
Rebuild WE and Japan; secure Turkey & Greece
Military
Aid
Investment through MNCs
¤
END OF US GOLD STANDARD
Why did the system end?
US as central banker = Big strain
Lots of US dollars held outside of US
Large investment outflows by MNCs
Declining exports
Rising oil prices, cartel
Vietnam War
US civil rights movement
New competition
Japan, Germany
= Nixon delinks $
Fixed to floating exchange rate
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END OF US GOLD STANDARD
Effects
Floating exchange rate system
Hard on GS
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Peg to major currency
Belize, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia-USD
Former African colonies-euro
•Morocco, Ivory Coast, Cameroon
END OF US GOLD STANDARD
Effects (cont.)
o Adopt foreign currency
Ecuador, Panama-USD
European microstates
euro
o
Accept/trade in
foreign currencies
ATM
– Cambodia
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http://www.phnompenhpost.com/business/acleda-ups-security-measures
END OF US GOLD STANDARD
What is Zimbabwe’s situation?
100 T dollars- couldn’t buy
bread
Adopted $ in 2009
Use rands, dollars, pounds
Problems
Can’t print currency
Coin shortage
Affects SA
Ecuador- mints centavos
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PEGGING CURRENCIES
Post- Bretton Woods, common
Benefits
Stability
Ties
Ex-pats
Common language
Familial ties with émigrés
Problems
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Former Caribbean, African colonies to Europeans
LA to US
Float at market rates
If dollar, yen, euro, etc., too strong, need to adjust
Domestic issues- can’t hold peg
IMS INTERDEPENDENCY
INTERDEPENDENCY
Global Currency Flows
Most traded currency?
U.S. dollar- 81.01% of world’s trade
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/12/03/us-markets-offshore-yuan-idUSBRE9B204020131203?feedType=RSS&feedName=businessNews
Second
most traded currency?
Yuan/remnimbi at 8.66%
2004
2007
2010
2013
$1.9 T
$3.3 T
$4 T
$5.3 T
Global currency exchange
http://www.economist.com/news/economic-and-financial-indicators/21586351-global-foreign-exchange-turnover
INTERDEPENDENCY
Primary Banking Centers
-60% of global capital through 4 cities
Rank
City
2014
2013
In Billions
In Billions
Change
1
London
$44.4
$44.2
+<1%
2
New York
$35.9
$31.4
+1.2%
3
Tokyo
$30.3
$18.4
+ 39%
4
Paris
$22.1
$16.6
+25%
http://www.joneslanglasallesites.com/gcf/global-capital-markets-research/cities
INTERDEPENDENCY
How the GS became indebted
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Post WWII- colonies gained independence
Reliance on primary resources
Cash crops
Raw materials
Desire to industrialize
Needed to borrow $
DEBT CREATION
Oil-rich
countries
Developing
countries
Western
banks
INTERDEPENDENCY
GS= Lots of debt
GN Banks
GN: Lend $ to
make interest
GS: Export
goods to GN
Invest
Petrodollars to
earn interest
Oil States
GS States
GS: Borrow money
to buy oil
INTERDEPENDENCY
Economic crisis in one country contagion
Where
Next
it all began
Great Depression 1929
- Mexico, 1982
Why couldn’t Mexico declare bankruptcy?
Followed
later by…
Crisis
Year
Mexico “Tequila Crisis”
1994
“Asian Flu” Crisis
1997
Russian “Ruble Crisis”
1998
Argentina
2001, 2014
Global Recession (US, EU)
2008
Eurozone
2010
GN ADVANTAGES
HISTORICAL ADVANTAGES
Industrial
Revolution
Colonization & Imperialism
Colonies = Resource suppliers
GS
become indebted
Creation of Institutions (post WWII)
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CREATED INSTITUTIONS
International Monetary Fund (IMF)
Bretton Woods Agreement (1944)
Purpose: Monetary stability
Short-term crises
GN dominance
Choose Chief- Christine Lagarde
Voting advantage
Austerity plans
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Structural Adjustment Plans (SAPs)
CREATED INSTITUTIONS
International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (IBRD)
Also Bretton Woods (1944)
Present-day World Bank Group (WB)
Purpose: Rebuild Europe, promote growth
GN policy dominance
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President- GN- Jim Yong Kim
CREATED INSTITUTIONS
European Coal & Steel Community (ECSC)
Regional IGO (1951) of 6 states
Purpose: Reduce tariffs
Present-day EU- now 28
Western Europe
dominance
Significance to IMS
Eurozone- 19 members
Common currency
¤
http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2015/02/european-economy-guide
CREATED INSTITUTIONS
Group of Five (G-5) (1985)
Purpose: Coordinate monetary policy
US, UK, France, Germany, Japan
Added Italy, Canada= G-7
Added Russia = G-8
Deleted Russia = G-7 (blame Putin)
G-20 (1999)
Sort of replaced G-8 (2009)
Include EEs
GDP (85%)
Trade (80%)
Population (66%)
G-7 still active
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kkk
IMS ISSUES: INFLATION
Disparity between the value of a good/service and
its cost
Means less purchasing power
Determined by consumer price index
Looks at changes over time
Need to find balance
Raise interest rates to curb inflation
Effect- help lower consumer prices
More people save, fewer spend, prices drop
Drop interest rates to encourage inflation
Advantage= encourage spending to stimulate
economy
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IMS ISSUES: EUROZONE CRISIS
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5.
What caused the Eurozone crisis? (video, news)
What problems did the ECB encounter?
What was Greece’s situation?
How did the crisis in Greece cause a contagion?
Why was Germany unscathed by the crisis?
IMS ISSUES: EUROZONE CRISIS
1.
What caused the Eurozone crisis?
Long-term
Short-term
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Structural problems
Lack of competitiveness
Bloated public sectors
Lack of political and economic coordination
Global recession
EU banks took a hit, reduced lending
Effect: reduced consumption, investment
Sovereign debt crisis
IMS ISSUES: EUROZONE CRISIS
2.
What problems did the ECB encounter?
Gov’ts had to borrow $ to bail out their banks,
stimulate economies
Too much government spending
Higher unemployment
Lower business profits
Fewer tax revenues
Set up permanent bailout fund (2011)
European Stability Mechanism
€500 B
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IMS ISSUES: EUROZONE CRISIS
3.
What was Greece’s situation?
High public debt
Too much gov’t spending (high debt-to-GDP ratio)
Couldn’t borrow $
Interest rates increased on borrowing
Higher risk demands higher interest rates
Subject to IMF, EU (ECB) austerity (SAP) policies
Led to protests
Gov’t fell
¤
IMS ISSUES: EUROZONE CRISIS
4.
How did the crisis in Greece cause a contagion?
Italy, Spain, Portugal, Ireland
Loans at higher interest rates
Forced to accept SAP terms for bailouts*
Reduce budget deficits
Public debt
Private debt
Lack of competitiveness
Higher inflation rates
Ignored Eurozone spending rules
Deficits, debt level
Led to ‘fiscal pact’ between most EU countries
Rules agreed upon re: budget deficits ¤
*Situations/terms varied by country
IMS ISSUES: EUROZONE CRISIS
5.
Why was Germany unscathed by the crisis?
Already reformed risky policies, improved
competitiveness
World’s second largest exporter by value and
volume
Within EU
Outside EU
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Respectable products with same currency
Borrowed money to buy goods
Euro value decreased, made goods cheaper
Drop in unemployment rates
IMS ISSUES: EUROZONE EXPANSION
1.
What issues did Latvians encounter when
transitioning to the euro?
Felt change was anti-nationalist
Why would Latvia want to join the Eurozone,
considering the crisis?
2.
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Easier to do business with other euro countries
Avoid fees for exchanging lats into euros
Want link to Western Europe (v. Russia)
Small economy—likely to benefit from integration
IMS ISSUES: THE US & BONDS
Quantitative Easing- policies gov’ts use to protect
economy
US, UK, EU, Japan
US bought bonds to stimulate economy
Put $ into the system to stimulate growth
Federal Reserve decreasing bond buying by $10 B/mo
¤
Stopped October 2014
IMS ISSUES: THE US & BONDS
¤
Effects
US bought bonds
Investors go elsewhere for higher growth/interest
rate returns
Affected EEs
US decreased bond buying
Investors turned back to US
Safer investment market
IMS ISSUES: THE US & BONDS
¤
Implications
Less money in EEs MNCs get less revenue
EEs use foreign reserves to protect own currency
rather than buy US bonds
‘Fragile Five’
TKY, BZ, IN, IND, SA
Possible contagion
THE SPICE TRADE
IMS ISSUES: PRICES & STABILITY
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4.
How did the spice trade lead Europe into global
monetary dominance?
Why is reliance on cash crops so risky?
What are the pros and cons of FTAs for farmers?
Why did Vietnam enter pepper production? What
global effect did this have?
IMS ISSUES: PRICES & STABILITY
1.
How did the spice trade lead Europe into global
monetary dominance?
Used to rely on commodities as ‘cash’
• Spices, metals, shells, etc.
Colonization
• Cash crops
Trade
Currency system
¤
Pieces of eight
Gold Standard
IMS ISSUES: PRICES & STABILITY
2.
Why is reliance on cash crops so risky?
Economies not diversified
Large % dependent on cash crop income
Currency speculation
Affects purchasing power, prices of exports/imports
Investment recovery not guaranteed
Debt cycle
Price volatility
Vulnerable to weather, disasters
Competition
Lack insurance
Effects of FTAs, new producers
IMS ISSUES: PRICES & STABILITY
3.
What are the pros and cons of FTAs for farmers?
Competition
• Domestic, foreign, new
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Cheaper, better quality goods
Greater market access
Limited options if can’t compete
IMS ISSUES: PRICES & STABILITY
4.
¤
Why did Vietnam enter pepper production? What
global effect did this have?
Less pepper competition
Better profits than current crops
Less land, fewer inputs
SPICE TRADE: RECAP
Colonization;
neocolonialism
Accrued debts in 1960s and 1970s
Lack autonomy over debt management
Prices
and stability
Primary v. manufactured goods
Price volatility
Lack of national unity
THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
About the IMS
Brief History
High level of interdependence
Advantages of GN
Issues in the IMS