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Economics: Foreign Exchange

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Full lesson including notes, simple definitions, examples, and graphs. Ch 7: Topics: Foreign Exchange Market Exchange Rate Currency Appreciation/Depreciation Types of Foreign Exchange Balance of Payments: Current Account, Financial Account, Capital Account

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  • June 13, 2021
  • 7
  • 2020/2021
  • Class notes
  • Mr. g
  • All classes
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Economics 7: Foreign Exchange


Foreign exchange market: the exchange of one currency for another takes place in this market
 Decentralized market: many different locations
Exchange rate: the price of one currency in terms of another “The price of money”
 The price of $1 is NAF 1.80 in SXM currency


Money is a commodity (like mangoes) to be bought and sold.

 If money scarce: price goes up
 If money plentiful: price decreases
Example: The price of $1 in Euros is 1.2Euro.
In NL where the currency is euros, the dollars are scarce, thus the price raised


Reciprocal exchange rate: exchange rate in the opposite direction


Reasons for buying foreign exchange/currency:

 Travel & tourism
 Trade: buy foreign goods
 Investment: financial or real (changes in components affects market)
Example: Grenada ECD$  foreign exchange  USD$
If SXMER wants to build a factory in Jamaica, we have to use USD$ to buy Jam$ or if travel
because USD$ is part of the demand market for JAM$
If study: Ackee cure COVID  Demand increased, shifting curve out


Demand increased  appreciation of JAM$
New equilibrium  new price of JAM$ (happens every day with floating exchange rate
currencies NOT NAF)
If 1 currency becomes more valuable, then others depreciate

, When buying from foreign countries people concerned with how much domestic currency is
given up to acquire commodities: The domestic price of foreign goods:
DOMESTIC CURRENCY VALUE = FOREIGN CURRENCY PRICE X EXCHANGE RATE
US$ VALUE = PRICE IN MEXICAN PESOS X # OF MEXICAN PESOS
= 120 PESOS X 0.10 PESOS = $12
Appreciation of currency: the value rises relative to a foreign currency

 Appreciated Domestic currency can buy more of foreign currency
 Foreign goods become cheaper compared to the domestic currency
 Domestic goods become more expensive to foreign currency (Reciprocal
exchange rate)
 Thus  ceteris paribus: an appreciation of domestic currency results in an
increase in imports, decrease in exports, and decrease in level of net exports


Depreciation of currency: the value declines relative to a foreign currency

 Causes an increase in imported goods in domestic economy
 Exports become cheaper compared to foreign markets
 Thus, depreciation of a domestic currency results in a decrease in imports,
increase in exports and increase in net exports


Foreign governments control foreign exchange to manipulate currency value
Types of foreign exchange: (ER: Exchange Rate)

 Fixed ER: Don’t fluctuate depending on supply & demand (Central bank sets this NAF
fixed) (Certainty)
 Floating ER: currency fluctuates depending on supply & demand (must check price
constantly) (S&D determines price)
 Managed ER: floating within parameters (Not fixed or floating). Central bank monitors ER:
if too low/high they intervene, supply & demand
ER value decreases: country buys own currency and make it scarce (their central bank)
 If US$ depreciates mean that there is a lot of US$ in international markets.
Central bank buy a lot of US$, taking it off the market, making it scarce
 Example: country controls the price of milk. If price too low farmers cant
profit, government buys milk and takes it off the market, then price
increases for consumers

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