 (1.0K) | This chapter explained the workings of the international
monetary system and pointed out its implications for international
business. The chapter made the following points: - The gold standard is a monetary standard that
pegs currencies to gold and guarantees convertibility
to gold. It was thought that the gold standard
contained an automatic mechanism that
contributed to the simultaneous achievement of a
balance-of-payments equilibrium by all countries.
The gold standard broke down during the 1930s
as countries engaged in competitive devaluations.
- The Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange
rates was established in 1944. The U.S. dollar
was the central currency of this system; the value
of every other currency was pegged to its value.
Significant exchange rate devaluations were allowed
only with the permission of the IMF. The
role of the IMF was to maintain order in the international
monetary system (i) to avoid a repetition
of the competitive devaluations of the
1930s and (ii) to control price inflation by imposing
monetary discipline on countries.
- The fixed exchange rate system collapsed in
1973, primarily due to speculative pressure on
the dollar following a rise in U.S. inflation and a
growing U.S. balance-of-trade deficit.
- Since 1973 the world has operated with a floating
exchange rate regime, and exchange rates
have become more volatile and far less predictable.
Volatile exchange rate movements
have helped reopen the debate over the merits
of fixed and floating systems.
- The case for a floating exchange rate regime
claims (i) such a system gives countries autonomy
regarding their monetary policy and
(ii) floating exchange rates facilitate smooth adjustment
of trade imbalances.
- The case for a fixed exchange rate regime claims
(i) the need to maintain a fixed exchange rate
imposes monetary discipline on a country,
(ii) floating exchange rate regimes are vulnerable
to speculative pressure, (iii) the uncertainty that
accompanies floating exchange rates dampens
the growth of international trade and investment,
and (iv) far from correcting trade imbalances,
depreciating a currency on the foreign
exchange market tends to cause price inflation.
- In today's international monetary system, some
countries have adopted floating exchange rates,
some have pegged their currency to another currency
such as the U.S. dollar, and some have
pegged their currency to a basket of other currencies,
allowing their currency to fluctuate
within a zone around the basket.
- In the post–Bretton Woods era, the IMF has
continued to play an important role in helping
countries navigate their way through financial
crises by lending significant capital to embattled
governments and by requiring them to adopt
certain macroeconomic policies.
- An important debate is occurring over the appropriateness
of IMF-mandated macroeconomic
policies. Critics charge that the IMF often imposes
inappropriate conditions on developing
nations that are the recipients of its loans.
- The present managed-float system of exchange
rate determination has increased the importance
of currency management in international
businesses.
- The volatility of exchange rates under the present
managed-float system creates both opportunities
and threats. One way of responding to this
volatility is for companies to build strategic flexibility
and limit their economic exposure by dispersing
production to different locations around
the globe by contracting out manufacturing (in
the case of low-value-added manufacturing) and
other means.
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