scholarly journals A Century and a Half of Central Banks, International Reserves, and International Currencies

2016 ◽  
pp. 280-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry Eichengreen ◽  
Marc Flandreau

Significance The NBU has weathered political storms and economic turbulence since 2014 to emerge with clear anti-inflationary policies: keeping the key refinancing rate above inflation and maintaining comfortable international reserves to constrain money supply and ensure currency stability. It has retained the IMF's confidence where other state institutions have not. Impacts The NBU's pursuit of policies driven by economic rather than political imperatives will strengthen economic reformers in government. The central bank policy of supporting the hryvnia will increase the attractiveness of Ukraine's sovereign debt. Close cooperation with the NBU creates a template for IMF collaboration with central banks in states such as Moldova and Belarus.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 71-80
Author(s):  
Ramona Orăștean

Abstract The paper analyses the official use of international currencies as reserve currency (store of value) and anchor currency (unit of account). Examining the role as a reserve currency we note that the US dollar is the main reserve currency even if it recorded a decline given the decrease of the value of the US dollar reserve holdings and the gradual diversification of the currencies used. Since 2010, the euro's share decreased continuously may be due to the Eurozone crisis and the euro's depreciation against the US dollar. Then we show that the US dollar dominates as an anchor currency, though it was temporary abandoned during crisis time, having more than a regional dimension. At the same time, the use of the euro in exchange rate arrangements appears mainly in the regions that have close links with the euro area. Over the last few years, we have witnessed a gentle orientation towards a multimonetary world, especially regarding the use of the international currencies as reserve currency given the diversification of the currencies in which central banks understand to hold international reserves and the increasing share of the nontraditional currencies in total foreign exchange reserves.


Policy Papers ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  

Giving greater prominence to SDRs in international reserves would entail allocating them more frequently in significant amounts. The question has properly been raised whether such issuance would be inflationary for the world economy. This short paper addresses that question. It explores five different “scenarios” that describe how recipient countries and the leading central banks—most notably the U.S. Federal Reserve (FRB) and the EU’s European Central Bank (ECB)—would respond to those allocations. It concludes that SDR issuance would be inflationary for the world economy under two of the scenarios, but not under the remaining three scenarios, which include the most likely ones.


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