A small open economy with a credibly fixed exchange rate and mobile capital attempts to lower its domestic interest rate below the rate of the anchor country. Match each event in the resulting causal chain with its direct cause.
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Monetary Policy Under a Currency Peg
A small open economy, 'Patria', has credibly pegged its currency to the currency of a large economy, 'Imperia'. Patria's central bank, seeking to boost domestic investment, attempts to lower its policy interest rate to 2%, while Imperia's interest rate remains stable at 4%. Assuming international capital is fully mobile, what is the most likely immediate consequence of Patria's policy action?
Market Discipline in a Fixed Exchange Rate System
A small open economy with a credibly fixed exchange rate attempts to stimulate its economy by lowering its domestic interest rate below that of the country to which its currency is pegged. Arrange the following market and central bank reactions in the chronological order they would occur, demonstrating the mechanism that forces the country to abandon its independent interest rate policy.
A country with a credibly fixed exchange rate can sustainably maintain a domestic interest rate below the interest rate of its anchor country, as long as its central bank has a very large stock of foreign reserves to sell in the market to counteract the resulting pressure on its currency.
Critique of an Independent Monetary Policy Claim
In a small open economy with a perfectly credible fixed exchange rate and free movement of capital, the domestic nominal interest rate must align with the foreign nominal interest rate of the anchor country. Which statement best explains the market mechanism that enforces this alignment?
A small open economy with a credibly fixed exchange rate and mobile capital attempts to lower its domestic interest rate below the rate of the anchor country. Match each event in the resulting causal chain with its direct cause.
Defending a Non-Credible Currency Peg
A small open economy with a credibly fixed exchange rate and free capital mobility attempts to set its domestic interest rate significantly above the rate of the country to which its currency is pegged. What is the most direct and unavoidable consequence for the country's central bank as it tries to maintain the fixed exchange rate?