SDR Final
SDR Final
SDR Final
Francis
Dhanya.M.
The SDR is an international reserve asset, created
by the IMF in 1969.
SDRs are allocated to member countries in
proportion to their IMF quotas.
Also called paper gold, as it is not backed by any
currency or precious metal.
Used only among governments of member
countries and IMF for balance Of
payments settlements.
• The SDR is neither a currency, nor a claim on
the IMF. Rather, it is a potential claim on the
freely usable currencies of IMF members.
• Holders of SDRs can obtain these currencies
in exchange for their SDRs in two ways:
– Through the arrangement of voluntary exchanges
between members
– By the IMF designating members with strong
external positions to purchase SDRs from
members with weak external positions.
To support the Bretton Woods fixed exchange
rate system.
The dominant constituents of international
reserves are:
Government or central bank holdings of gold
Widely accepted foreign currencies (USD)
Inadequacy of these two key reserve assets,
led to creation of a new international reserve
asset under the auspices of the IMF.
Triffin dilemma
US Dollar was the world's principal foreign exchange
reserve asset
A deficit is necessary for the United States to supply
world demand for its Dollars
A deficit will, in time, lessen the value of the Dollar
and endanger the entire system
For balance of payments settlements among the
members
Used for transactions with fund for eg. By paying
the reserve tranche.
SDR denominated bank deposits and loans have
been offered in private financial markets.
• The value of the SDR initially defined as
0.888671 grams of fine gold = one U.S. dollar.
• After the collapse of the Bretton Woods system in
1973, SDR was redefined as a basket of currencies
• Basket consists of:
– Euro
– Japanese yen
– Pound sterling
– U.S. dollar
• The U.S. dollar-value of the SDR is posted daily on
the IMF's website.
Value of the SDR in national currency (say, ABC),
multiply the four exchange rates of the home
country vis-à-vis the basket-currency countries
(i.e., ABC/USD, ABC/EUR, ABC/JPY, and
ABC/GBP) with the basket values. Add these four
numbers together to obtain the ABC/SDR
exchange rate
Exchange rates quoted at noon each day in the
London market.
The basket composition is reviewed every five
years by the Executive Board
Most recent review (in November 2005), revision
was made based on
The value of the exports of goods and services.
The amount of reserves denominated by the
currencies of member countries.
The next review will take place in late 2010.
The SDR interest rate provides the basis for calculating:
Interest charged to members on regular (non-
concessional) IMF loans
Interest paid and charged to members on their SDR holdings
and charged on their SDR allocations.
Interest paid to members on a portion of their quota
subscriptions.
The SDR interest rate is determined weekly.
Is based on a weighted average of representative interest
rates on short-term debt in the money markets of the SDR
basket currencies.
Currency Currency Exchange rate Interest Rate- Product
amount-(A) against SDR- (C) (A*B*C)
(B)
Euro 0.4100 0.880587 0.7219 0.2606
Japanese Yen 18.4000 0.0076832 0.11100 0.0156
U.K. Pound 0.0903 1.01512 0.5100 0.0467
U.S. Dollar 0.6320 0.64154 0.1600 0.0649
Total: 0.3878
SDR interest 0.39
Rate