
Home > Terms > Armenian (HY) > փոխարժեք
փոխարժեք
The price at which one currency can be converted into another. Over the years, economists and politicians have often changed their minds about whether it is a good idea to try to hold a country’s exchange rate steady, rather than let it be decided by market forces. For two decades after the second world war, many of the major currencies were fixed under the Bretton Woods agreement. During the following two decades, the number of currencies allowed to float increased, although in the late 1990s a number of European currencies were permanently fixed under economic and monetary union and some other countries established a currency board. When capital can flow easily around the world, countries cannot fix their exchange rate and at the same time maintain an independent monetary policy. They must choose between the confidence and stability provided by a fixed exchange rate and the control over interest rate policy offered by a floating exchange rate. On the face of it, in a world of capital mobility a more flexible exchange rate seems the best bet. A floating currency will force firms and investors to hedge against fluctuations, not lull them into a false sense of stability. It should make foreign banks more circumspect about lending. At the same time it gives policymakers the option of devising their own monetary policy. But floating exchange rates have a big drawback: when moving from one equilibrium to another, currencies can overshoot and become highly unstable, especially if large amounts of capital flow in or out of a country. This instability has real economic costs. To get the best of both worlds, many emerging economies have tried a hybrid approach, loosely tying their exchange rate either to a single foreign currency, such as the dollar, or to a basket of currencies. But the currency crises of the late 1990s, and the failure of Argentina's currency board, led many economists to conclude that, if not a currency union such as the Euro, the best policy may be to have a freely floating exchange rate.
- Szófaj: noun
- Szinonimák:
- Blossary:
- Ipar/Tárgykör: Economy
- Kategória: Economics
- Company: The Economist
- Termék:
- Betűszó/Rövidítés:
További nyelvek:
Mit szeretne mondani?
Terms in the News
Featured Terms
phylum placozoa
Macroscopic, flattened marine animals, composed of ventral and dorsal epithelial layers enclosing ...
phylum cnidaria
Cnidarians. Hydras, hydroids, jellyfish, sea anemones, and corals. Free-swimming or sessile, with ...
share a term with millions
Share a term with millions of users around the world and increase your online visibility.Share a ...
oak
Genus native to the Northern Hemisphere with spirally arranged leaves, catkins for flowers and ...
Everest
The last but not least mount Everest. The Earth's highest mountain, with a peak at 8,848 metres ...
aglaonema
Genus of about 20 species of usually rhizomatous, evergreen perennials from tropical forest in Asia. ...
Robojelly
Robojelly is a hydrogen-powered robot desgined in the United States that moves through the water ...
Ferdinand Porsche
Ferdinand Porsche (3 September 1875 – 30 January 1951) was an Austrian-German automotive engineer ...
Marzieh Afkham
Marzieh Afkham, who is the country’s first foreign ministry spokeswoman, will head a mission in east ...
define1
Share a term with millions of users around the world and increase your online visibility.Share a ...
Beküldő
Featured blossaries
rufaro9102
0
Terms
41
Szójegyzékek
4
Követő
List of Revenge Characters


Browers Terms By Category
- General law(5868)
- Courts(823)
- Patent & trademark(449)
- DNA forensics(434)
- Family law(220)
- Legal aid (criminal)(82)
Legal services(8095) Terms
- Cosmetics(80)
Cosmetics & skin care(80) Terms
- Nightclub terms(32)
- Bar terms(31)
Bars & nightclubs(63) Terms
- Investment banking(1768)
- Personal banking(1136)
- General banking(390)
- Mergers & acquisitions(316)
- Mortgage(171)
- Initial public offering(137)
Banking(4013) Terms
- General art history(577)
- Visual arts(575)
- Renaissance(22)