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Convergence between GDP(PPP) and GDP (Market exchange)

Economic theory predicts that as countries grow, their currency should appreciate. In other words, their GDP at market exchange rates should converge with cost-of-living-adjusted GDP (PPP). To measure ...
Particle king's user avatar
-4 votes
1 answer
55 views

Is there currency neither undervalued nor overvalued?

Is there currency neither undervalued nor overvalued? I assume there is such currency in country with fixed exchange-rate regime. Am I right? Thanks.
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
0 votes
1 answer
63 views

Why if Saudi Arabia will sell off European debt holdings then euro will be depreciated?

I read news about Saudi Arabia and I have a question. How to explain that if Saudi Arabia will sell off European debt holdings (+Euro bonds) then euro will be depreciated? My attempts to explain don't ...
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
0 votes
0 answers
17 views

How to calculate exchange rate (non-PPP rate) if we know purchasing power of two currencies?

Let we know: old purchasing power in country A (currency A) old purchasing power in country B (currency B) old random exchange rate (A/B) (non-PPP rate) and new purchasing power in country A (...
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
-1 votes
1 answer
45 views

How redenomination leads to strengthening of national currency?

I read that redenomination leads to strengthening of national currency but I didn't find more details. How is it possible? Thanks.
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
0 votes
0 answers
21 views

Is cause of undervalued currency the low cost of labor force or vice versa?

I read in some source that cause of undervalued currency is low cost of labor force. In another source I read that low cost of labor force is conclusion of undervalued currency. What case is true and ...
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
0 votes
3 answers
84 views

Why does this example illustrating the effect of growth on exchange rates not work?

I'm looking for a (very) elementary explanation for why economic growth leads to one's currency becoming more valuable. This certainly seems like it should happen (example: "An economy ...
Allure's user avatar
  • 1,302
1 vote
2 answers
62 views

What downside is there to making the USD the national currency for your country?

I get that for huge countries like China, you can't have the US controlling your currency. But for some smaller countries, or new fledgling countries, why not have the USD be your national currency? ...
chausies's user avatar
  • 111
0 votes
0 answers
32 views

What is the difference in economy between country that uses national currency only and country that uses not only national currency?

What is the difference in economy between country that uses national currency only and country that uses not only national currency (for example, national currency + dollar)? Thanks.
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
0 votes
2 answers
70 views

What would be a truly universal currency?

I have no clue where to ask this, so here it goes... With the advent of LK99 and its potential uses in recent solutions for modified Alcubierre drive fields, it pushes me to wonder: What if humanity ...
realreal's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
44 views

Determine the value of this hypothetical token

Suppose there is a token, an issuer of the token, and a reclaimer of the token. Every year at the beginning of the year the issuer creates and sells at auction 10 tokens. At the end of each year the ...
Jonah's user avatar
  • 343
0 votes
1 answer
75 views

Large quantity sale of CNY at current currency value

Some company wants to sell large quantity of CNY and buy USD on Forex. Let current currency value is 1 CNY = 0.14 USD at the time moment on Forex. When company sell large quantity of CNY, money supply ...
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
2 votes
1 answer
229 views

How to prove that an increase in the money supply leads to devaluation of the currency?

In one article I've read that increase in the money supply leads to inflation and exchange rate change. For example, if we have double increase in the money supply then we'll have double change in ...
Mike_bb's user avatar
  • 139
1 vote
1 answer
34 views

Visualizing the "Impossible Trinity"

I would like to create a data viz to show, in one chart, where some of the major economies are on the trilemma. It won't be perfect, but I'm just looking for a rough characterization. For my data viz ...
Arash Howaida's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
80 views

Distinction between world reserve currency and world reserve asset

The two sound very similar, almost identical: The dollar as a world reserve currency The dollar as a world reserve asset But I'd venture there are important distinctions. As an asset, the dollar is ...
Arash Howaida's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
77 views

How Demand of a product affects the currency

Question : Iron ore is Australia's largest export. Suppose that there was an unexpected increase in demand for Australia's iron ore exports globally. Explain what this would do to Australian Dollar ...
studenthere's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
93 views

Will the value of ruble decrease in the long term if the sanctions against Russia are not lifted?

For simplicity, let's take the example of the USD-to-RUB rate. Currently, Russia manages to maintain it at around 60 RUB per USD. However, as far as I understand it, they manage to do it by selling ...
Archil Zhvania's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
245 views

How can the exchange rate be virtually constant with major inflation rate difference and a widening trade deficit?

I have recently had a discussion with a colleague about what seems to be a rather strange macroeconomic aspect in Romania (which has RON currency): EUR-RON exchange rate has been virtually a flat ...
Alexei's user avatar
  • 251
1 vote
1 answer
74 views

Mistake in Wikipedia article on Fixed exchange rate system?

I think there is a mistake in the following Wikipedia-article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_exchange_rate_system at figure 2 and 3. I think the ECB has to BUY (not sell) the dollars as in point ...
user6322383's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
198 views

Did Russia peg Rubles to a Gold Standard?

Did Russia peg the Rubles to gold? I keep reading articles on that. Are there any catches or circumstantial facts, that Russia is not on a gold based standard? Trying to verify these articles. ...
mattsmith5's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
34 views

Should governments print money while the currency gets stronger

In a given situation where a local currency becomes very strong compared to other major currencies (like the USD, EUR, etc...), should the government / central bank leverage the opportunity to print ...
byteSlayer's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
155 views

Are there any notable exceptions to the Impossible Trinity theory?

I am referring to the theory presented on Wikipedia and The Economist that states: The impossible trinity (also known as the trilemma) is a concept in international economics which states that it is ...
Cristi B's user avatar
  • 113
2 votes
1 answer
80 views

Does it make sense to talk about Bitcoin 'inflation' when little to no goods and services are listed in Bitcoin currency?

I think of inflation as a generalized increase in the price levels of a basket of goods and services. I should add that my understanding presumes that inflation should be measured in the same currency ...
StatsScared's user avatar
-2 votes
1 answer
100 views

How does one country peg its currency to another's? [closed]

For example, Belize has pegged its currency to the US dollar at an exchange rate of 2 Belize dollars to 1 US dollar. How does Belize do that?
Bear Bile Farming is Torture's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
52 views

What is the effect of currency depreciation on import prices?

In Macroeconomics: A European Perspective (3rd ed., Blanchard, Amighini and Giavazzi), when discussing the reason for differences in the GDP deflator and the HICP for the EU, it states the following ...
percipio's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
55 views

What happened to the Zimbabwe cash dollar after the introduction of Dollarization?

Let's say, before dollarization, I owned 1 million Zimbabwean dollars in cash and the next day dollarization went into effect. So in dollarization, the current Zimbabwean dollars will be invalid and ...
theanilpaudel's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
410 views

Demand Curve of Foreign Exchange

My high-school Macroeconomics textbook states that 'There is an inverse relationship between the price of foreign currency, or exchange rate, and demand for foreign exchange. When the exchange rate ...
Sahaj's user avatar
  • 307
2 votes
0 answers
89 views

Log deviation from steady state - understanding a journal paper

I hope a question like this is fair game on this website! I'm doing some research for my thesis, and have come across what seems to be a pretty simple model - two countries, A (representing the USA) ...
user3822171's user avatar
26 votes
4 answers
8k views

Could eliminating all taxes and only creating new money theoretically work?

Imagine you had the opportunity to found a new country from scratch (in 2020). Value exchange would be digital, where only the state can create new currency units. Instead of relying on income tax ...
Nico's user avatar
  • 369
2 votes
1 answer
75 views

Why does a current account deficit contribute to making a country a "sitting duck" for currency speculators?

George Soros had this to say about the factors surrounding his famous short of the British pound: The U.K. had a large current-account deficit…, modest FX reserves and no capital controls to rebuff ...
Arash Howaida's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
188 views

Is Currency Devaluation a cause or effect of interest rates?

I understand that Federal bank/Goverment can manipulate the currency market and devalue its currency by printing more money or buying foreign currencies/assets (essentially increasing the supply of ...
Raj Mehta's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
25 views

Why would China's FX reserves stay flat as the Fed ramps up its balance sheet?

As seen in the chart, China's FX reserves have remained flat lately despite the massive balance sheet expansion of the Fed. Though out of the temporal domain of this chart, if it were extended back to ...
Arash Howaida's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
2k views

How to interpret correctly the uncovered interest rate parity condition

So, according to my macroeconomics professor's notes, the UNCOVERED INTEREST RATE PARITY CONDITION is defined this way : Now, i don't quite grasp the concept of the 'expected appreciation rate of ...
Sara Saletti's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
157 views

Is fiat currency better than a backed-currency?

My question is would it be better if we went back to something like a gold standard but backed by a finite virtual material instead? It avoids the problem of fluctuations in gold supply. The money-...
Tian's user avatar
  • 21
2 votes
1 answer
52 views

Why did foreigners keep buying Swiss francs at -41% (not a typo) interest rate in the 1970s?

A Bloomberg (opinion) piece notes In January 1975, the Swiss government held an emergency meeting and then took the extraordinary step of slapping a 41% annual penalty on foreign deposits. But even ...
fantastic peace and prosperity's user avatar
0 votes
4 answers
147 views

What is the difference between microeconomics money and macroeconomics money?

In microeconomics, \$USD are a store of value. I can sell a candy bar for \$1, and I can hang onto that \$1 for a year and then buy the same candy bar for that same \$1. If I print \$1 (and get away ...
Him's user avatar
  • 187
0 votes
1 answer
100 views

What strategies can the president employ to deflate the dollar

United States president Donald Trump has publicly declared a desire to deflate the value of the dollar. I have read in news reports that he has asked aids to find ways to decrease the dollar's ...
jyapx's user avatar
  • 123
0 votes
1 answer
21 views

Purchasing power of currency abroad

Say you have two countries A and B. Suppose we have a situation where country A's currency can purchase much more in country B than the other way round. What causes this phenomenen? Is it possible ...
Trajan's user avatar
  • 649
1 vote
1 answer
913 views

Why does capital flight cause inflation?

Context: I was watching a video about Venezuela, and, it all started with capital flight due to poor confidence in the government. The government tried to stop it, and in the process it created a ...
Physicist137's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
253 views

Why don't we transact with securities rather than fiat money?

I don't know a whole lot about economics besides for an intro course I took once so bear with me please... I'm a software developer working with cryptocurrencies, and I got to thinking that it would ...
Jonah's user avatar
  • 343
6 votes
3 answers
603 views

Are cryptocurrencies a ponzi scheme or a bubble?

Several users in this forum have addressed bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies as ponzi schemes. Bitcoins have several uses which could legitimate its value as a currency, but also have received ...
JoaoBotelho's user avatar
  • 2,155
1 vote
3 answers
145 views

How do economic and financial policies in government deal with cryptocurrencies?

Given the decentralized nature of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and ethereum, how can centralized organisations like banks and the government create policies around it without changing the way ...
Michael Lai's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
100 views

What are the constituents of a country's inflation

If we assume a country where only demand pull inflation holds, that is no imports cost inflation or currency fluctuations are a risk, then we can assume that inflation is determined by: Consumer ...
Jason's user avatar
  • 133
2 votes
1 answer
186 views

Norway inflation and exchange rates

I am looking at Norway's economy, and I'm trying to make sense of some of the data I see. Norway's economy has a very close relationship to crude oil, and in 2014 crude oil had a massive drop. Looking ...
Jason's user avatar
  • 133
1 vote
1 answer
38 views

Where can I find historical (very old) USD printing data?

Where can I find historical/very old USD printing data? Charts can be useful, but I want numbers. It is for a project.
Aspiring Mathematician's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
308 views

How would unlimited free energy affect the global market? [closed]

What will the effect on today's global market if a new source of free unlimited energy was to be discovered? How badly will it disrupt today's global market and how badly will it affect our currency? ...
Deiknymi's user avatar
  • 113
1 vote
1 answer
117 views

Why is Japanese Currency tied to gold?

I was listening to a Bloomberg market update, and the journalist mentioned that the Japanese currency was down as Gold rose. I've heard that investors park their money in Yen. Is the reason the Yen ...
mark's user avatar
  • 113
2 votes
0 answers
30 views

Can a weaker currency be used to offset lower productivity of labour in an economy?

Can a weaker currency be used to offset supply-side (specifically low productivity of labour) problems of an economy to restore international competitiveness?
staircase's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
8k views

Confused about relation of inflation to a currency's depreciation?

I'm a complete newbie to this foreign exchange stuff and was reading about the impact a country's price levels have on exchange rates. So from what I understand, the general idea is that inflation ...
Aaron 's user avatar
  • 41
4 votes
2 answers
1k views

Uncovered Interest Parity question

I am trying to understand the fact that, given that the uncovered interest parity holds, a rise in dollar interest rates will cause the dollar to appreciate. Is this a good intuition? Uncovered ...
manity's user avatar
  • 41