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Thorvaldur Gylfason Joint Vienna Institute/IMF Institute Course on Macroeconomic Management in Natural Resource-Rich Countries Vienna, 2-13 April 2012 1. Real vs. nominal exchange rates 2. Exchange rate policy, welfare, and growth 3. Dutch disease, overvaluation, and volatility 4. Exchange rate regimes To float or not to float How many currencies? eP Q P* Increase in Q means real appreciation Q = real exchange rate e = nominal exchange rate P = price level at home P* = price level abroad eP Q P* Q = real exchange rate e = nominal exchange rate P = price level at home P* = price level abroad 1. Suppose e falls eP Q P* Then more rubles per dollar, so X rises, Z falls 2. Suppose P falls Then X rises, Z falls 3. Suppose P* rises Then X rises, Z falls Capture all three by supposing Q falls Then X rises, Z falls Remember: eP Q P* Devaluation needs to be accompanied by fiscal and monetary restraint to prevent prices from rising and thus eating up the benefits of devaluation To work, nominal devaluation must result in real devaluation Real exchange rate Imports Exports Foreign exchange Equilibrium between demand and supply in foreign exchange market establishes Equilibrium real exchange rate Equilibrium in balance of payments BOP = X + Fx – Z – Fz =X–Z+F = current account + capital account = 0 Real exchange rate R Deficit Imports Overvaluation Exports Foreign exchange Price of foreign exchange Overvaluation works like a price ceiling Supply (exports) Overvaluation Deficit Demand (imports) Foreign exchange Appreciation of currency in real terms, either through inflation or nominal appreciation, leads to a loss of export competitiveness In 1960s, Netherlands discovered natural resources (gas deposits) Currency (Dutch guilder) appreciated Exports of manufactures and services suffered, but not for long Not unlike natural resource discoveries, aid inflows could trigger the Dutch disease in receiving countries Review basic theory of Dutch disease in simple demand and supply model Analytical literature uses complex two- or three sector models Tradable manufactures Tradable resources Nontradable services Real exchange rate C B A Imports Exports with oil Exports without oil Foreign exchange Real exchange rate C B Imports Imports with immigration D A Exports with oil Exports without oil Foreign exchange Spending Increased income from booming natural resource sector boosts private and public spending, raising prices and output in non-tradables sector In non-natural resource tradables sector (“manufacturing”), prices are fixed at world levels, profits are squeezed by rising wages, and increased demand is met out of rising imports Resource effect movement effect Natural resource boom attracts capital and labor away from rest of economy Output declines in non-resource economy, esp. in tradables, where prices are fixed at world levels Both effects result in Decrease in output share of non-natural resource tradables relative to non-tradables Appreciation of real exchange rate So, decline of manufacturing and appreciation of currencies in real terms tend to go hand in hand Extensive theoretical literature behind this result What do the data say? Recent literature survey by Magud and Sosa (2010) “When and Why Worry About Real Exchange Rate Appreciation? The Missing Link between Dutch Disease and Growth,” WP/10/271 Number of cases reported 45 40 35 Yes No 35 30 25 30 25 20 20 15 15 Yes No 10 10 5 5 0 0 Dutch disease shocks Natural resources/capital inflows Source: Magud and Sosa (2011) Number of cases reported 4 8 Yes 7 3 Yes 6 No 5 No 4 3 2 2 1 1 0 0 Appreciation Lower T/NT output Remittances Lower growth Foreign aid Source: Magud and Sosa (2011) Number of cases reported 14 12 10 Yes No 30 25 Yes No 20 8 15 6 10 4 2 5 0 0 Empirical studies Theoretical studies Source: Magud and Sosa (2011) Number of cases reported 30 6 Ye s 25 5 20 4 15 3 10 2 5 1 0 0 Real overvaluation Real undervaluation Currency misalignments Yes No Real appreciation Real depreciation Exchange rate changes Source: Magud and Sosa (2011) Dutch Resource booms make currencies appreciate When currency appreciates in real terms, factors of production are reallocated and production switches away from manufacturing disease does exist Exchange rate volatility hampers economic growth (not shown here, will see later) Misalignment of real exchange rate from its fundamental value also lowers growth Overvaluation is always bad for growth Evidence on the effect of undervaluation on growth is inconclusive Foreign exchange earnings are converted into local currency and used to buy domestic goods Fixed exchange rate regime Reserve inflow causes expansion of money supply that leads to inflation and appreciation of domestic currency in real terms Flexible Increase exchange rate regime in supply of foreign exchange leads to nominal appreciation of currency, so real exchange rate also appreciates Real exchange rate C B A Imports Exports with aid Exports without aid Foreign exchange Real exchange rate C B A Imports Exports with inflow Exports without inflow Foreign exchange 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Netherlands Iceland Norway Volatility of commodity prices leads to volatility in exchange rates, export earnings, output, and employment Volatility can be detrimental to investment and growth Hence, natural-resource rich countries may be prone to sluggish investment and slow growth due to export price volatility Likewise, high and volatile exchange rates tend to slow down investment and growth Uneven income stream Even income stream Per capita growth adjusted for initial incomw (% per year) Inverse cross-country correlation between per capita growth and GDP volatility GDP volatility is defined as the standard deviation of per capita growth 163 countries, 1960-2000 6 r = -0.47 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 -8 0 4 8 12 16 20 Volatility of GDP Output volatility and economic growth 1960-2000 Large inflows of foreign exchange earnings from a natural resource discovery can trigger a bout of Dutch disease Real appreciation hurts competitiveness of exports and can thus undermine economic growth Exports have played a pivotal role in the economic development of many countries An accumulation of “know-how” often takes place in the manufacturing export sector, which may confer positive external benefits on the rest of the economy Resource disease if It leads to high demand for nontradables Production of nontradables cannot be increased without raising wages in that sector Resource rent is not used to build up infrastructure and relax supply constraints Trade restrictions may produce this outcome Recipient country uses aid to buy nontradables (including social services) rather than imports Production is at full capacity boom is likely to lead to Dutch Including free mobility of labor across countries Price and wage increases in nontradables sector lead to strong wage pressure in tradables sector The risk that resource boom might have adverse impact on economy due to, e.g., oil-induced Dutch disease crucially depends on how resource rent is used in recipient countries We can identify four different cases based on how the rent is spent, and in which the macroeconomic implications of rent flows differ Spending can take several forms, with different macroeconomic implications: Case 1: Rent is saved by government Case 2: Rent is used to purchase imported goods that would not have been purchased otherwise Case 3: Rent is used to buy nontradables with infinitely elastic supply Case 4: Rent is used to buy nontradables for which there are supply constraints Rent is saved by government Rent inflow leads to accumulation of foreign exchange reserves in Central Bank … and, unlike increased rent that is spent, is not allowed to enter the spending stream No effect on money supply No inflation No appreciation of currency I.e., no increase in exchange rate No risk of Dutch disease Rent is used to purchase imported goods that would not have been purchased otherwise Import purchases lead to transfer of real resources from abroad, but not to increased spending at home No effect on money supply No inflation No appreciation of currency No risk of Dutch disease Rent is used to buy domestic nontradables with infinitely elastic supply due to underutilized resources (labor and capital) in economy Increased demand for nontradables Because some factors are unemployed, greater demand leads to increased supply This has a positive impact on production without increasing nontradables prices No risk of Dutch disease Rent is used to buy nontradables for which there are supply constraints, with all available resources already in use (e.g., social services) Increased demand for nontradables Increased prices for nontradables Shift of inputs away from tradables (exports and import-competing goods and services) into nontradables Real appreciation of the currency Dutch disease! Monetary policy response determines if real appreciation of currency will take place through inflation or nominal appreciation If foreign currency is used to increase Central Bank reserves, increased spending on nontradables increases money supply and inflation, so currency appreciates in real terms If Central Bank sterilizes impact on money supply of increased spending on nontradables by selling foreign exchange, currency appreciates in nominal, and real, terms To recapitulate, the risk of Dutch disease varies, and depends on How rent is used (saved or spent) – CASE 1 The presence of a rent absorption constraint – CASE 2 The impact of rent on productivity in the nontradables sector – CASE 3 The existence of externalities in nontradables sector affecting the rest of the economy – CASE 4 Rent inflow can give rise to Dutch disease when government uses the rent to purchase nontradables rather than imported goods and when there are constraints on increasing production in nontradables sector The risk of Dutch disease is greater when rent is used in social sectors facing constraints on increasing their production due to resource scarcity (rent absorption constraint) How can resource-rich countries avoid translating rent into Dutch disease? Save the rent and increase central bank reserves (gross, not net) by not allowing the rent inflow to enter spending stream Recall the Hartwick rule Use rent to purchase imported goods Boost rent absorption capacity in nontradables sector Policymakers in resource-rich countries need to pay attention to potential early warning signals of, say, oil-induced Dutch disease such as Tendency for wages and prices in nontradables sector to increase Decline in profitability and sales of export and import-competing industries Rapid relative rise of per capita GDP in dollars Recall: Argument applies to sudden inflows of foreign capital as well as natural resource booms The real exchange rate always floats Through nominal exchange rate adjustment or price change Even so, it matters how countries set their nominal exchange rates because floating takes time There is a wide spectrum of options, from absolutely fixed to completely flexible exchange rates There is a range of options Monetary union or dollarization Means giving up your national currency or sharing it with others (e.g., EMU, CFA, EAC) Currency board Legal commitment to exchange domestic for foreign currency at a fixed rate Fixed exchange rate (peg) Crawling peg Managed floating Pure floating Currency union or dollarization Currency board Peg FIXED Fixed Horizontal bands Crawling peg Without bands With bands Floating FLEXIBLE Managed Independent Dollarization Use another country’s currency as sole legal tender Currency union Share same currency with other union members Currency board Legally commit to exchange domestic currency for specified foreign currency at fixed rate Conventional (fixed) peg Single currency peg Currency basket peg Flexible peg Fixed but readily adjusted Crawling peg Complete Compensate for past inflation Allow for future inflation Partial Aimed at reducing inflation, but real appreciation results because of the lagged adjustment Fixed but adjustable Managed floating Management by sterilized intervention I.e., by buying and selling foreign exchange Management by interest rate policy, i.e., monetary policy E.g., by using high interest rates to attract capital inflows and thus lift the exchange rate of the currency Pure floating Governments may try to keep the national currency overvalued To keep foreign exchange cheap To have power to ration scarce foreign exchange To make GDP look larger than it is Other examples of price ceilings Negative real interest rates Rent controls in cities Inflation can result in an overvaluation of the national currency Remember: Q = eP/P* Suppose e adjusts to P with a lag Then Q is directly proportional to inflation Numerical example Real exchange rate Suppose inflation is 10% per year 110 105 100 Average Time Real exchange rate Suppose inflation rises to 20% 120 110 Average 100 Time Under floating Depreciation is automatic: e moves But depreciation may take time Under a fixed exchange rate regime Devaluation will lower e and thereby also Q – provided inflation is kept under control Does devaluation improve the current account? The Marshall-Lerner condition If overvaluation of currency hurts exports, undervaluation must by similar logic help exports Yet, as we saw, empirical evidence is mixed Some countries – e.g., China – have kept their currencies undervalued to boost exports and contain imports Undervaluation as export promotion policy Undervaluation leads to buildup of foreign exchange reserves Reserve buildup raises some of the same issues as natural resources booms In view of the success of the EU and the euro, economic and monetary unions appeal to many other countries with increasing force Consider four categories Existing monetary unions De facto monetary unions Planned monetary unions Previous – failed! – monetary unions CFA franc 14 African countries CFP 3 Pacific island states East franc Caribbean dollar 8 Caribbean island states Picture of Sir W. Arthur Lewis, the great Nobel-prize winning development economist, adorns the $100 note Euro, more recent 16 EU countries plus 6 or 7 others Thus far, clearly, a major success in view of old conflicts among European nation states, cultural variety, many different languages, etc. Australian dollar Indian rupee South Africa plus Lesotho, Namibia, Swaziland – and now Zimbabwe Swiss franc New Zealand plus 4 Pacific island states South African rand India plus Bhutan (plus Nepal) New Zealand dollar Australia plus 3 Pacific island states Switzerland plus Liechtenstein US dollar US plus Ecuador, El Salvador, Panama, and 6 others East Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda Eco African shilling (2009) (2009) Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone (plus, perhaps, Liberia) Khaleeji Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi-Arabia, and United Arab Emirates Other, (2010) more distant plans Caribbean, Southern Africa, South Asia, South America, Eastern and Southern Africa, Africa Danish krone 1886-1939 Denmark and Iceland 1886-1939: 1 IKR = 1 DKR 2009: 2,500 IKR = 1 DKR (due to inflation in Iceland) Scandinavian monetary union 1873-1914 East African shilling 1921-69 Mauritius and Seychelles 1870-1914 Southern African rand Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, and 3 others Mauritius rupee Denmark, Norway, and Sweden South Africa and Botswana 1966-76 Many others Centripetal tendency to join monetary unions, thus reducing number of currencies To benefit from stable exchange rates at the expense of monetary independence Centrifugal tendency to leave monetary unions, thus increasing number of currencies To benefit from monetary independence often, but not always, at the expense of exchange rate stability With globalization, centripetal tendencies appear stronger than centrifugal ones FREE CAPITAL MOVEMENTS Monetary Union (EU) FIXED EXCHANGE RATE MONETARY INDEPENDENCE FREE CAPITAL MOVEMENTS FIXED EXCHANGE RATE Capital controls (China) MONETARY INDEPENDENCE FREE CAPITAL MOVEMENTS Flexible exchange rate (US, UK, Japan) FIXED EXCHANGE RATE MONETARY INDEPENDENCE FREE CAPITAL MOVEMENTS Flexible exchange rate (US, UK, Japan) Monetary Union (EU) FIXED EXCHANGE RATE Capital controls (China) MONETARY INDEPENDENCE If capital controls are ruled out in view of the proven benefits of free trade in goods, services, labor, and also capital (four freedoms), … … then long-run choice boils down to one between monetary independence (i.e., flexible exchange rates) vs. fixed rates Cannot have both! Either type of regime has advantages as well as disadvantages Let’s quickly review main benefits and costs Benefits Fixed exchange rates Floating exchange rates Costs Benefits Fixed exchange rates Floating exchange rates Stability of trade and investment Low inflation Costs Benefits Fixed exchange rates Floating exchange rates Costs Stability of trade Inefficiency and investment BOP deficits Low inflation Sacrifice of monetary independence Benefits Fixed exchange rates Floating exchange rates Costs Stability of trade Inefficiency and investment BOP deficits Low inflation Sacrifice of monetary independence Efficiency BOP equilibrium Benefits Fixed exchange rates Floating exchange rates Costs Stability of trade Inefficiency and investment BOP deficits Low inflation Sacrifice of monetary independence Efficiency Instability of BOP equilibrium trade and investment Inflation In view of benefits and costs, no single exchange rate regime is right for all countries at all times The regime of choice depends on time and circumstance If inefficiency and slow growth due to currency overvaluation are the main problem, floating rates can help If high inflation is the main problem, fixed exchange rates can help, at the risk of renewed overvaluation Ones both problems are under control, time may be ripe for monetary union There is no evidence that countries with abundant natural resources are more prone to inflation than other countries They tend to grow more slowly, yes, but their inflation record is indistinguishable from others Therefore, as far as inflation is concerned, choice between fixed and floating rates is essentially the same in natural-resource rich countries and elsewhere Volatility of export earnings in natural-resource rich countries calls for flexibility – if not in exchange rate, then, e.g., in migration What countries actually do (Number of countries, April 2008) (22) (84) (12) (44) (40) (76) (10) (66) (3) (5) (2) Source: Annual Report on Exchange Arrangements and Exchange Restrictions database. No national currency Currency board Conventional fixed rates Intermediate pegs Managed floating Pure floating 6% 7% 36% 5% 24% 22% 100% 54% 46% There is a gradual tendency towards floating, from 10% of LDCs in 1975 to almost 50% today, followed by increased interest in fixed rates through economic and monetary unions