Appreciation – increase in the value of a currency in a FFERS.
Depreciation – decrease in value of a currency in a FFERS.
Inflation
Employment
Current account balance
Foreign debt
Fixed exchange rate system – exchange rates are “fixed” by the central bank and do not respond to supply/demand changes. Gov’t intervention is used to maintain this fixed rate.
Official reserves
A hypothetical exchange rate of 1.5 US dollars = 1 euro gives us the price of one euro in terms of dollars. If we want to find the price of one dollar in terms of euros, we divide the unit currency (euro) by the other currency (dollars).
Therefore:
1 dollar = 1/1.5 euro = 0.67 euro
The expressions 1.5 dollars = 1 euro, and 0.67 euro = 1 dollar are equivalent.
Amount of Euro appreciation = (New dollar value of euro – Old dollar value of euro) /
Old dollar value of euro
Ifthe value of the euro rises from $0.93 to $0.99 per euro, the amount of euro appreciation is computed as
(0.99 -0.93)/0.93 = 6.45%
Amount of dollar depreciation = (New euro value of dollar – old euro value of dollar) / Old euro value of dollar
The value of the dollar drops from 1/0.93 euros to 1/0.99.
Hence the amount of dollar depreciation is computed as
(1/0.93 — 1/0.99) / (1/0.93) = 6.06%
The exchange rate is the price of a currency.
If we are given demand and supply functions of the form Qd = a – bP and Qs = c + dP. In the equation, Qd = Qs, we will get the equilibrium price.
EXPANSIONARY | CONTRACTIONARY |
Increases aggregate demand | Decreases aggregate demand |
Decreases Interest Rates | Increases Interest Rates |
Depreciates the currency | Appreciates the currency |
Increases net exports | Decreases net exports |
It improves trade deficit and worsens trade surplus | It improves trade surplus and worsens trade deficit |
NOTE: PEDM = PED for imports, PEDX = PED for exports.
The effect of currency depreciation on the trade deficit depends on price elasticity of demand for exports and imports. The J-curve effect says a trade deficit can worsen after depreciation but improve in the medium term if the Marshall-Lerner condition holds. It is called J-curve because of its shape.