Consider the following three hypothetical countries, all of which have their own national currency and a central bank:
- Country A: Operates with a flexible exchange rate and its central bank actively adjusts its policy interest rate to manage domestic inflation.
- Country B: Maintains a fixed exchange rate with a major trading partner, requiring its central bank to consistently match the policy interest rate of the partner's central bank.
- Country C: Has a flexible exchange rate but is highly integrated into global financial markets, leading its central bank to closely follow international interest rate trends to avoid large capital flows.
Based on these descriptions, which statement most accurately describes the formal, legal ('de jure') authority of these central banks?
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In principle, a country that maintains its own national currency retains the _________ power to set its own policy interest rate, even if practical considerations related to its exchange rate policy limit its ability to use that power effectively.
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Consider the following three hypothetical countries, all of which have their own national currency and a central bank:
- Country A: Operates with a flexible exchange rate and its central bank actively adjusts its policy interest rate to manage domestic inflation.
- Country B: Maintains a fixed exchange rate with a major trading partner, requiring its central bank to consistently match the policy interest rate of the partner's central bank.
- Country C: Has a flexible exchange rate but is highly integrated into global financial markets, leading its central bank to closely follow international interest rate trends to avoid large capital flows.
Based on these descriptions, which statement most accurately describes the formal, legal ('de jure') authority of these central banks?