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Factors That Determine the Currency Exchange Rates

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Factors that Determine the Currency Exchange Rates

Exchange rate is often referred to as the nominal exchange rate. It is

defined as the rate at which one currency can be converted, or

'exchanged', into another currency. For example, the pound is

currently worth about 1.824 US dollars. One pound can be converted

into 1.824 dollars. This is the exchange rate between the pound and

the dollar. There are four types of currencies can be operated, which

are a floating, managed and fixed exchange rate.

Lots of developed industrial nations like US ($), UK (???) and Japan (??¥)

operate floating exchange rates. A floating exchange rate is known as

freely floating and should be self-regulating. It is often determined

by the market demand and supply without any other government or

official interference. As the exchange rate between pound and dollar

for example, the price of pound in terms of dollar would decided by

the demand for pounds from whom hold dollars and the supply of pounds

from sterling holder who want to buy dollars. When people in the UK

try to buy US goods and services they will supply pounds to US,

however, when people from US try to by UK goods and services they will

demand UK pounds. At this time, the price which keeps the demand and

supply force in balance is the exchange rate between pound and dollar.

As it shows in

[IMAGE]Price of ???s in $s S D

$1.5

(FIGURE 1.1)

D S

0 Q Quantity of???s

figure1.1, when one pound equals one and a half dollars, the price is

in equilibrium.

Although floating exchange rate is mainly affect by market forces,

actually sometimes a nation's central bank try to influence the

exchange rate. They can use the way of adjusting the interest rate to

influence the capital flow into or out of the country or directly

buying or selling the currency. The reason central bank try to manage

the exchange rate is to reduce the fluctuations around the equilibrium

exchange rate they believed. The ERM which stands for the exchange

rate mechanism is an example of a managed exchange rate. It is

fundamentally for preventing large fluctuations relative to European

Union's (EU) countries' currencies. the member countries of EU have to

keep their currencies value within a permitted band. Country has to

take actions to bring its exchange rate value within the set band when

its currency moves out of it. As it shows in figure1.3 that there is

an increase in demand for imports, then lead the supply curve to shift

right from S to S'. In order to lower the price of the currency, the

country may take actions such as raising its domestic interest rates

or buy its own currency. This results demand curve shifts right from D

to D' and keep the value of the exchange rate within the band.

Price of currency in Euros

[IMAGE] D'

S

D S'

Upper margin

Lower margin

D'

S

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