4 The International Monetary System: Chapter Objectives
4 The International Monetary System: Chapter Objectives
Chapter Objectives
3. To present a history of the international monetary system, from the gold standard
of the late 19th century to the hybrid exchange system that prevails today.
4. To list major recent crises in the international monetary system, such as the
Mexican peso crisis in December 1994 and the Asian financial crisis in 1997.
Chapter Outline
I. Overview
A. The international monetary system consists of laws, rules, institutions,
instruments, and procedures, all of which are involved in the international
transfers of money.
i. The elements above affect foreign exchange rates, international
trade and capital flows, and balance-of-payments adjustments.
B. The international monetary system plays a critical role in the financial
management of multinational businesses and the economic policies of
individual countries.
Foreign Exchange Rate is the price of one currency expressed in another currency.
Fixed Exchange Rate is an exchange rate which does not fluctuate or which changes
within a predetermined band.
Flexible Exchange Rate is an exchange rate that fluctuates according to market forces.
Appreciation is a rise in the value of a currency against other currencies under a floating
rate system.
Currency board is a monetary institution that only issues currency to the extent it is
fully backed by foreign reserves.
International Monetary Fund (IMF) was created as a weak kind of central banks'
central bank at the Bretton Woods conference to make the new monetary system feasible
and workable.
Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) became an international reserve asset on July 28, 1969,
when more than the required 85 percent of the IMF members approved the plan.
Euro is a new currency unit, which replaced the individual currencies of the European
Union, that was introduced over a three year period from 1999 to 2002.
Crawling Peg is a proposal that would provide for regular modification of par value
according to a agreed-upon formula.
Crawling Band or the gliding band is a proposal that combines a wider band and a
crawling peg.
2. Under the purely fluctuating exchange rate system, the balance of payments
imbalances are automatically corrected by the following mechanism .
A. speculation
B. government intervention
C. interest rate changes
D. supply and demand in exchange markets
E. none of the above
3. Which of the following is not directly related to the Bretton Woods system?
A. 1944
B. the fixed exchange rate system
C. the bank of England
D. the International Monetary Fund
E. the World Bank
4. Which of the following is not directly attributable to the collapse of the fixed
exchange rate system?
A. U.S. balance of payments deficits
B. the decrease in the U.S. dollar value
C. the decline of international reserves
D. Japan's trade surplus
E. none of the above
5. The Group of Ten got together at the Smithsonian Institution to agree on a wider band
system so that exchange rates can fluctuate .
A. 5% above and below the central rate
B. 2.25% above and below the central rate
C. 2% above and below the central rate
D. 4% above and below the central rate
E. 10% above and below the central rate
6. The Jamaican Agreement was held to amend the Bretton Woods Agreement of the
fixed exchange rate system in .
A. 1973
B. 1975
C. 1976
D. 1978
E. 1979
7. Factors that cause demand and supply schedules for foreign exchange to shift include:
A. relative inflation rates
B. relative interest rates
C. different welfare systems
8. The July 1993 currency crisis in Europe caused the European Monetary System to
widen the bands within which member currencies could fluctuate against other
member currencies, to of a central value.
A. 14%
B. 15%
C. 16%
D. 17%
E. 18%
11. Since 1976, each member of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has been
required to contribute % of its quota in its own currency and % in Special
Drawing Rights or convertible currencies.
A. 25; 75
B. 50; 50
C. 75; 25
D. 90; 10
E. 95; 5
12. The reserve tranche of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) means that by
exchanging their own currencies for convertible currencies, a member country may
draw % of its quota.
A. 25
B. 50
C. 75
D. 80
E. 100
14. Which of the following is not a rational for a regional, Asian Monetary Fund?
A. Any IMF support package is not sufficient in a case of currency crisis for middle-
income countries, such as the East Asian countries.
B. Contagions of currency crisis tend to be geographically concentrated.
C. East Asian countries are underrepresented in the quota formula of the IMF.
D. The IMF has grown to powerful and needs to have its influence limited.
E. Both regional surveillance and peer pressures are important in an attempt to
prevent a currency crisis.
15. Special drawing rights are used to settle payments by the following organizations
except
A. IMF member countries
B. prescribed organizations
C. central banks
D. multinational corporations
E. A, B, and C
16. SDR interest rates are the weighted average interest rate of .
A. given short-term rates
B. SDR countries
C. Treasury Bill rates
D. certificate of deposits (CD) rates
E. IMF member countries
20. The decline of the U.S. dollar value in the late 1980s was mainly attributable to the
following agreement .
A. Louvre Accord
B. Plaza Accord
C. Smithsonian Agreement
D. Jamaica Agreement
E. None of the above
23. The proposal under which a par value of a currency is adjusted intermittently is
referred to as a .
A. wide band
B. narrow band
C. crawling peg
D. crawling band
E. gliding band
24. The quota allotted to a member country of the IMF, which it can borrow at will, is
known as tranche.
A. gold
B. basic
C. member
D. credit
E. reserve
25. Economists regard the creation of the Euro as a new European currency in the
international monetary system as the most important development since .
26. A country may link its exchange rate to the value of a major currency, usually the
U.S. dollar or the French franc. This is called .
A. a currency par
B. a currency peg
C. a currency composite
D. a currency basket
E. none of the above
27. If and when the value of the Japanese yen against the U.S. dollar goes up 15%, it
affects the following items .
A. the price of imported Japanese cars
B. the price of Japanese cameras
C. the price of Japanese pearls sold in Troy, Ohio
D. the price of a Sharp copier in Detroit
E. all of the above
Answers
Multiple Choice Questions
1. B 10. D 19. B
2. D 11. C 20. B
3. C 12. E 21. B
4. D 13. C 22. B
5. B 14. D 23. C
6. C 15. D 24. E
7. C 16. B 25. C
8. B 17. E 26. D
9. D 18. D 27. E