Deck 6: Global Money and Finance

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Question
What is a "balance of payments" equilibrium (deficit, surplus) and how does it relate to foreign reserves?
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Question
What is meant by the "current account" and the "capital (or financial) account"?
Question
Does it make economic sense for a country to have a very high current account surplus?
Question
What could be reasons for a country to experience (high) current account deficits (surpluses)?
Question
(How) are government budget deficits related to current account deficits?
Question
What are the implications of a high capital inflow that leads to a surplus in the capital & financial balance?
Question
In what different ways can the exchange rate be defined and what does it mean when the domestic currency appreciates?
Question
What is the difference between the nominal and real exchange rate and when do both measures differ in their information about a country's price competitiveness?
Question
Which price indices can best be used for calculating the real exchange rate?
Question
What is the Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) and what are its determinants?
Question
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. A balance of payments surplus means that a country has an export surplus.
2. The current account records all in- and outflow of foreign exchange.
3. A very high current account surplus often goes together with a capital (sometimes also called: financial) account deficit.
4. For running a current account surplus, a country must spend less than it produces.
5. High government budget deficits are always behind a current account deficit.
6. A high capital inflow can lead to excess spending.
7. A depreciation of the domestic currency can - everything else equal - make our economy less price competitive.
8. The real exchange rate provides better information on a country's price competitiveness than the nominal exchange rate.
9. For calculating the real exchange rate, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is the best choice.
10. The Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) is a trade-weighted average of bilateral real exchange rates.
Question
What is the difference between flexible and fixed exchange rate regimes?
Question
Why and how do economists differentiate between short-term and long-term determinants of exchange rates?
Question
How does the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) theory explain exchange rates developments?
Question
What does the PPP theory predict for countries that adopt a fixed exchange rate regime?
Question
How does the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP) theory explain exchange rate movements?
Question
What is the likely impact of an expected depreciation of the home currency on domestic interest rates?
Question
Does the UIPR always hold and if not, what could be a reason behind it?
Question
What does the UIRP imply for countries that have adopted a fixed exchange rate regime?
Question
How good are PPP and UIRP in predicting exchange rates?
Question
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. Countries with a fixed exchange rate regime will never devalue their currency.
2. In the short-run exchange rates are more likely to be influenced by financial arbitrage than by arbitrage in goods.
3. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) theory relates to the "law of one price".
4. According to PPP theory, a country that has adopted a fixed exchange rate has full control over its inflation rate.
5. According to the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP), increases in foreign interest rates tend to lower the value of the domestic currency.
6. According to the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP), interest rates will always converge across countries under perfect capital mobility.
7. Expected exchange rate changes can lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy.
8. Changes in country risk premia can explain that sometimes the UIRP does not hold.
9. According to the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP), countries that have adopted a fixed exchange rate can control their interest rate.
10. PPP and UIRP are good predictors for future exchange rates, especially in the short run.
Question
What is meant by (capital account) convertibility of a currency?
Question
What is the role of the liquidity system of a currency system?
Question
What were key reasons for the Gold Standard to collapse?
Question
What are the key elements of the Bretton Woods System (BWS)?
Question
What were the major reasons for the termination of the BWS?
Question
Compare the costs and benefits of flexible and fixed exchange rates.
Question
What are the costs and benefits of a currency union?
Question
What is an "Optimum Currency Union" (OCA) and - in your opinion - is the European Monetary Union (EMU) and OCA?
Question
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. Current account convertibility allows selling and buying foreign exchange for all purposes.
2. The US dollar was an essential part of the liquidity system under the Gold Standard.
3. The Gold Standard features an automatic and symmetric adjustment mechanism.
4. A major reason for the Gold Standard to collapse was the downward rigidity of prices and wages in the presence of the Great Depression.
5. The Bretton Woods System was essentially a flexible exchange rate system.
6. High inflation in the US ultimately led other countries to leave the Bretton Woods System
7. Flexible exchange rates can help countries to deal with external economic shocks.
8. The monetary policy trilemma suggests that flexible exchange rates are not compatible with monetary autonomy and full capital mobility.
9. It is a major cost of a currency union that it cannot deal easily with asymmetric shocks.
10. The European Monetary Union was introduced in 1999 because it clearly met all criteria for an optimal currency union (OCA).
Question
What is the global interbank market, aka money market?
Question
What are the two major benefits of global finance?
Question
What are the risks and costs of global finance?
Question
What types of financial crises can be distinguished?
Question
How to speculate against a fixed exchange rate?
Question
What are the policy options to deal with a devaluation expectation?
Question
Explain in brief why and how the EMS crisis of 1992/93 developed.
Question
What two different narratives explain the EMU crisis?
Question
How can the euro be made more sustainable?
Question
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. Portfolio investment comprise both equity and bond investments.
2. The global interbank market is the market where banks lend to corporations worldwide.
3. Global finance contributes to a globally optimal allocation of capital.
4. Sudden stops can constitute a major risk in foreign finance.
5. The term "twin crisis" is used to signify a currency crisis that occurs in two countries at the same time.
6. When expecting a currency devaluation, a (temporary) purchase of foreign currency can be profitable.
7. A country can defend its currency by lowering interest rates.
8. A key factor for the EMS crisis of 1992/93 was that EMS member countries preferred a devaluation of their currencies over high interest rates.
9. It is undisputed among economist that excessive government budget deficits in southern EMU member countries are the cause of the eurozone crisis.
10. Joint risk sharing in the EMU would make the currency union even more unstable.
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Deck 6: Global Money and Finance
1
What is a "balance of payments" equilibrium (deficit, surplus) and how does it relate to foreign reserves?
No Answer.
2
What is meant by the "current account" and the "capital (or financial) account"?
No Answer.
3
Does it make economic sense for a country to have a very high current account surplus?
No Answer.
4
What could be reasons for a country to experience (high) current account deficits (surpluses)?
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5
(How) are government budget deficits related to current account deficits?
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6
What are the implications of a high capital inflow that leads to a surplus in the capital & financial balance?
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7
In what different ways can the exchange rate be defined and what does it mean when the domestic currency appreciates?
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8
What is the difference between the nominal and real exchange rate and when do both measures differ in their information about a country's price competitiveness?
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9
Which price indices can best be used for calculating the real exchange rate?
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10
What is the Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) and what are its determinants?
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11
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. A balance of payments surplus means that a country has an export surplus.
2. The current account records all in- and outflow of foreign exchange.
3. A very high current account surplus often goes together with a capital (sometimes also called: financial) account deficit.
4. For running a current account surplus, a country must spend less than it produces.
5. High government budget deficits are always behind a current account deficit.
6. A high capital inflow can lead to excess spending.
7. A depreciation of the domestic currency can - everything else equal - make our economy less price competitive.
8. The real exchange rate provides better information on a country's price competitiveness than the nominal exchange rate.
9. For calculating the real exchange rate, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is the best choice.
10. The Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) is a trade-weighted average of bilateral real exchange rates.
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12
What is the difference between flexible and fixed exchange rate regimes?
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13
Why and how do economists differentiate between short-term and long-term determinants of exchange rates?
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14
How does the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) theory explain exchange rates developments?
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15
What does the PPP theory predict for countries that adopt a fixed exchange rate regime?
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16
How does the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP) theory explain exchange rate movements?
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17
What is the likely impact of an expected depreciation of the home currency on domestic interest rates?
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18
Does the UIPR always hold and if not, what could be a reason behind it?
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19
What does the UIRP imply for countries that have adopted a fixed exchange rate regime?
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20
How good are PPP and UIRP in predicting exchange rates?
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21
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. Countries with a fixed exchange rate regime will never devalue their currency.
2. In the short-run exchange rates are more likely to be influenced by financial arbitrage than by arbitrage in goods.
3. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) theory relates to the "law of one price".
4. According to PPP theory, a country that has adopted a fixed exchange rate has full control over its inflation rate.
5. According to the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP), increases in foreign interest rates tend to lower the value of the domestic currency.
6. According to the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP), interest rates will always converge across countries under perfect capital mobility.
7. Expected exchange rate changes can lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy.
8. Changes in country risk premia can explain that sometimes the UIRP does not hold.
9. According to the uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP), countries that have adopted a fixed exchange rate can control their interest rate.
10. PPP and UIRP are good predictors for future exchange rates, especially in the short run.
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
What is meant by (capital account) convertibility of a currency?
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23
What is the role of the liquidity system of a currency system?
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24
What were key reasons for the Gold Standard to collapse?
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25
What are the key elements of the Bretton Woods System (BWS)?
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26
What were the major reasons for the termination of the BWS?
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27
Compare the costs and benefits of flexible and fixed exchange rates.
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28
What are the costs and benefits of a currency union?
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29
What is an "Optimum Currency Union" (OCA) and - in your opinion - is the European Monetary Union (EMU) and OCA?
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30
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. Current account convertibility allows selling and buying foreign exchange for all purposes.
2. The US dollar was an essential part of the liquidity system under the Gold Standard.
3. The Gold Standard features an automatic and symmetric adjustment mechanism.
4. A major reason for the Gold Standard to collapse was the downward rigidity of prices and wages in the presence of the Great Depression.
5. The Bretton Woods System was essentially a flexible exchange rate system.
6. High inflation in the US ultimately led other countries to leave the Bretton Woods System
7. Flexible exchange rates can help countries to deal with external economic shocks.
8. The monetary policy trilemma suggests that flexible exchange rates are not compatible with monetary autonomy and full capital mobility.
9. It is a major cost of a currency union that it cannot deal easily with asymmetric shocks.
10. The European Monetary Union was introduced in 1999 because it clearly met all criteria for an optimal currency union (OCA).
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k this deck
31
What is the global interbank market, aka money market?
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32
What are the two major benefits of global finance?
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33
What are the risks and costs of global finance?
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34
What types of financial crises can be distinguished?
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35
How to speculate against a fixed exchange rate?
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36
What are the policy options to deal with a devaluation expectation?
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37
Explain in brief why and how the EMS crisis of 1992/93 developed.
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38
What two different narratives explain the EMU crisis?
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39
How can the euro be made more sustainable?
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40
Identify the 5 correct statements
1. Portfolio investment comprise both equity and bond investments.
2. The global interbank market is the market where banks lend to corporations worldwide.
3. Global finance contributes to a globally optimal allocation of capital.
4. Sudden stops can constitute a major risk in foreign finance.
5. The term "twin crisis" is used to signify a currency crisis that occurs in two countries at the same time.
6. When expecting a currency devaluation, a (temporary) purchase of foreign currency can be profitable.
7. A country can defend its currency by lowering interest rates.
8. A key factor for the EMS crisis of 1992/93 was that EMS member countries preferred a devaluation of their currencies over high interest rates.
9. It is undisputed among economist that excessive government budget deficits in southern EMU member countries are the cause of the eurozone crisis.
10. Joint risk sharing in the EMU would make the currency union even more unstable.
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.