During the first decade and half after World War II,United States monetary authorities did not actively intervene or directly operate in foreign exchange market for purpose of influencing the dollar exchange rate orexchange market conditions. Under the Bretton Woods par value exchange rate system,obligation of United States was to assure the gold convertibility of the dollar at $35 per ounce to central banks and monetary authorities of IMF members.The actions a other governments,intervening in dollars as appropriate to keep their own currencies within one percent of dollar par value IMF rules required, maintained the day-to-day market level of the dollar within those narrow margins. Under that arrangement, the United States played only a passive role in the determination of exchange rates in the market: In a system of “n” currencies, not every one of the “n” countries can independently set its own exchange rate against the others. Such a system would be over-determined. At least one currency must be passive, and the dollar served as that “nth” currency.
In the early 1960s , United States became more active in exchange market operations. By then,the United States had begun to experience its own serious and prolonged balance payments problems. Increasingly, the United States became concerned about protecting its gold stock and maintaining the credibility of the dollar’s link to gold and the official gold price of $35 per ounce on which the world par value system of exchange rates was based.
The Bretton Woods fixed exchange rate system became unsustainable over time broke down in 1971 and finally collapsed in 1973. In 1978, after much of the world had moved de facto to a floating exchange rate system, the IMF Articles were amended to change the basic obligation of IMF members.No longer were members obliged to maintain par values; instead, they were “to collaborate with Fund and other members to assure orderly exchange arrangements and to promote stable system of exchange rates.” Each a authorized to adopt exchange arrangement of its choice—fixed floating, tied to another currency or to a basket of currencies—subject, in all cases, to general obligations of the IMF: to avoid exchange rate manipulation; to promote orderly economic, financial, and monetary conditions and foster order economic growth with reasonable price stability. U.S.law was amended to authorize the United States to accept obligation introduced in the 1978 IMF amendment.
Currently, the exchange rate regime of the United States is recorded by the IMF under the classification of “Independent Floating,” with the notation that exchange rate of the dollar is determined freely in the foreign exchange market. Of course, the United States does on occasion intervene in the foreign exchange market, as described below. However, in recent periods such occasions have been rare; the United States has intervened only when there was clear and convincing case that intervention was called for.
1. U.S. FOREIGN EXCHANGE OPERATIONS UNDER BRETTONWOODS
During Bretton Woods years,although there were number of changes in various nations’ a values, exchange rate fluctuations were relatively modest most of the time. However, exchange market pressures showed in other ways. Much attention was paid to the size of U.S. gold reserves in relation to the size of U.S. official dollar liabilities—the dollar balances held by official institutions in other countries. Various measures were taken to protect the U.S. gold stock acredibility dollar convertibility for foreign official holders. Many actions were taken by U.S. authorities to hold down the growth of what foreign central banks might regard as their “excess” dollar balances, with view to reducing the pressure for conversion of official dollar holdings into gold. Specific U.S. actions taken during the Bretton Woods par value period included:
borrowing foreign currencies from foreign monetary authorities through reciprocal credit lines (swap lines) for the purpose of selectively buying dollars from certain foreign central banks that might otherwise have sought to convert those dollars into gold;
selling foreigncurrency-denominated bonds (called Roosa bonds after the then Under- Secretary of the Treasury) to mop up excess dollars that might otherwise be converted by foreign central banks into gold;
acquiring foreign currencies by drawing down the U.S. reserve position at the IMF, again using those currencies to buy excess dollars from other central banks and also to pay off swap debts;
cooperate with monetary authorities of other major countries to buy and sell gold in the free market to maintain the free market dollar price of gold close to the official price of $35 per ounce; and
intervening, on occasion, directly in th foreign exchange market during the 1960s and early 1970s in order to reduce the pressures to convert dollars into gold, and to maintain or restore orderly conditions in volatile currency markets.
2. U.S. FOREIGN EXCHANGE OPERATIONS SINCE THE AUTHORIZATION IN 1978 OF FLOATING EXCHANGE RATES
with the interpretation.During some periods, “countering disorderly market conditions” has been interpreted very narrowly, and intervention has been limited to rare and extreme situations; during other periods, it has been interpreted broadly and operations have been extensive.
During the first dozen years after exchange rate floating was sanctioned by 1978 IMF amendment, the United States changed its approach and its goals several times. There were a number of key turning points, and the U.S. experience from 1978 to 1990 breaks down into five distinct periods.
All U.S. intervention operations in the foreign exchange market are publicly reported on a quarterly basis, few weeks after the close of the period. These reports, entitled “Treasury and Federal Reserve Foreign Exchange Operations,” are presented by the Manager of the System Open Market Account and are published by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and in the Federal Reserve Bulletin.Each report documents any U.S. intervention activities of the previous quarter, describing the market environment in which they were conducted. This series provides a record of U.S. actions in the foreign exchange market for the period since 1961.
3. EXECUTING OFFICIAL FOREIGN EXCHANGE OPERATIONS
In some countries the central bank serves as government’s principal banker, or only banker, for international payments. In such cases, the central bank may buy and sell foreign exchange, not only for foreign exchange intervention purposes, but for such purposes as paying government bills, servicing foreign currency debts, and executing transactions for the national post office, railroads, and power company.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York conducts all U.S. intervention operations in the foreign exchange market on behalf of U.S. monetary authorities.It also conducts certain nonintervention business transactions on behalf of various U.S. Government agencies. Given the vast array of international activities in which U.S. Government departments agencies are involved, it is left to individual agencies to acquire the foreign currencies needed for their operations in the most economical way they can find. Today, only fraction of the U.S. Government’s total foreign exchange transactions are funneled through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; the bulk of such transactions go directly through commercial or other channels.
At the New York Fed, the Foreign Exchange Desk monitors the foreign exchange market on a continuing basis, watching the market and keeping up-to-date with significant developments that may be affecting the dollar and other major currencies. The Desk staff tracks market conditions around the clock during periods of stress. Federal Reserve staff, like others in the market, sit in trading room surrounded by screens, telephones, and computers, watching the rates, reading the continuous outpouring of data, analyses, and news developments, listening over the brokers’ boxes to the flow of transactions, and talking on telephone with other market players to try to get full understanding of different market views on what is happening and likely to happen and why.Quite importantly,Desk personnel also stay in close touch with their counterparts in the central banks of the other major countries—both in direct one-toone calls and through regularly scheduled conference calls—to keep informed on developments in those other markets, to hear how the other central banks assess developments and their own aims, and to discuss with them emerging trends and possible actions. The staff on the Foreign Exchange Desk of the New York Fed confers regularly, several times a day,with staff both at Treasury and at the Federal Reserve Board of Governors in Washington, reporting the latest developments and assessments about market trends and conditions.
4. FINANCING FOREIGN EXCHANGE INTERVENTION
All foreign exchange operations by the monetary authorities must,of course,be financed.In the case of a foreign central bank operating in dollars to influence the exchange rate for its currency,that simply may mean transfers into or out of its dollar accounts (held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or at commercial banks) as it buys and sells dollars in market. For the United States, it currently means adding to or reducing the foreign currency balances held by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve.However,U.S. techniques for acquiring resources for xchange market operation have gone through several phases
During the late 1940s and the1950s, under the Bretton Woods system,the United States kept its reserves almost entirely in the form of gold, and did not hold significant foreign currency balances. Since the U.S. role in the foreign exchange markets was entirely passive, market intervention and financing market intervention were not an issue.
In the early 1960s, when the United States began to operate more actively in foreign exchange market and was reluctant to draw down its gold stock, U.S. authorities began practice of establishing reciprocal currency arrangement—or swap line central banks and monetary authorities abroad,as means of gaining rapid access to foreign currencies for market intervention and other purposes.
The foreign currency balances owned by the Treasury’s Exchange Stabilization Fund and by the Federal Reserve System are regularly invested in a variety of instruments that have a high degree of liquidity, good credit quality, and market-related rates of return.A significant portion of the balances consists of German and Japanese government securities, held either directly or under repurchase agreement. As of June 1998, outright holdings of foreign government securities by U.S. monetary authorities totaled $7.1 bn, and government securities held under repurchase agreements by U.S. monetary authorities totaled $10.9 billion. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York makes these various investments for both the Treasury and the Federal Reserve, and the Desk stays in close contact with German and Japanese money market and capital market sources in arranging these transactions.