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Currency substitution

Currency substitution is the use of a foreign currency in parallel to or instead of a domestic currency.[1] The process is also known as dollarization or euroization when the foreign currency is the dollar or the euro, respectively.

Worldwide official use of foreign currency or pegs.
  United States dollar users, including the United States
  Currencies pegged to the United States dollar
  Euro users, including the Eurozone
  Currencies pegged to the euro

  Australian dollar users, including Australia
  Indian rupee users and pegs, including India
  New Zealand dollar users, including New Zealand
  Pound sterling users and pegs, including the United Kingdom
  Russian ruble users, including Russia and other territories
  South African rand users (CMA, including South Africa)

  Three cases of a country using or pegging the currency of a neighbor

Currency substitution can be full or partial. Full currency substitution can occur after a major economic crisis, such as in Ecuador, El Salvador, and Zimbabwe. Some small economies, for whom it is impractical to maintain an independent currency, use the currencies of their larger neighbours; for example, Liechtenstein uses the Swiss franc.

Partial currency substitution occurs when residents of a country choose to hold a significant share of their financial assets denominated in a foreign currency. It can also occur as a gradual conversion to full currency substitution; for example, Argentina and Peru were both in the process of converting to the U.S. dollar during the 1990s.

Origins

 
Map of current exchange rate regimes (2018) De facto exchange-rate arrangements in 2018 as classified by the International Monetary Fund.
  Floating (floating and free floating)
  Soft pegs (conventional peg, stabilized arrangement, crawling peg, crawl-like arrangement, pegged exchange rate within horizontal bands)
  Hard pegs (no separate legal tender, currency board)
  Residual (other managed arrangement)

After the gold standard was abandoned at the outbreak of World War I and the Bretton Woods Conference following World War II, some countries sought exchange rate regimes to promote global economic stability, and hence their own prosperity. Countries usually peg their currency to a major convertible currency. "Hard pegs" are exchange rate regimes that demonstrate a stronger commitment to a fixed parity (i.e. currency boards) or relinquish control over their own currency (such as currency unions) while "soft pegs" are more flexible and floating exchange rate regimes.[2] The collapse of "soft" pegs in Southeast Asia and Latin America in the late 1990s led to currency substitution becoming a serious policy issue.[3]

A few cases of full currency substitution prior to 1999 had been the consequence of political and historical factors. In all long-standing currency substitution cases, historical and political reasons have been more influential than an evaluation of the economic effects of currency substitution.[4] Panama adopted the US dollar as legal tender after independence as the result of a constitutional ruling.[5] Ecuador and El Salvador became fully dollarized economies in 2000 and 2001 respectively, for different reasons.[4] Ecuador underwent currency substitution to deal with a widespread political and financial crisis resulting from massive loss of confidence in its political and monetary institutions. By contrast, El Salvador's official currency substitution was a result of internal debates and in a context of stable macroeconomic fundamentals and long-standing unofficial currency substitution. The eurozone adopted the euro (€) as its common currency and sole legal tender in 1999, which might be considered a variety of full-commitment regime similar to full currency substitution despite some evident differences from other currency substitutions.[6]

Measures

There are two common indicators of currency substitution. The first measure is the share of foreign currency deposits (FCD) in the domestic banking system in the broad money including FCD. The second is the share of all foreign currency deposits held by domestic residents at home and abroad in their total monetary assets.[5]

Types

Unofficial currency substitution or de facto currency substitution is the most common type of currency substitution. Unofficial currency substitution occurs when residents of a country choose to hold a significant share of their financial assets in foreign currency, even though the foreign currency is not legal tender there.[7] They hold deposits in the foreign currency because of a bad track record of the local currency, or as a hedge against inflation of the domestic currency.

Official currency substitution or full currency substitution happens when a country adopts a foreign currency as its sole legal tender, and ceases to issue the domestic currency. Another effect of a country adopting a foreign currency as its own is that the country gives up all power to vary its exchange rate. There are a small number of countries adopting a foreign currency as legal tender.

Full currency substitution has mostly occurred in Latin America, the Caribbean and the Pacific, as many countries in those regions see the United States Dollar as a stable currency compared to the national one.[8] For example, Panama underwent full currency substitution by adopting the US dollar as legal tender in 1904. This type of currency substitution is also known as de jure currency substitution.

Currency substitution can be used semiofficially (or officially bimonetary systems), where the foreign currency is legal tender alongside the domestic currency.[9]

In literature, there is a set of related definitions of currency substitution such as external liability currency substitution, domestic liability currency substitution, banking sector's liability currency substitution or deposit currency substitution, and credit dollarization. External liability currency substitution measures total external debt (private and public) denominated in foreign currencies of the economy.[9][10] Deposit currency substitution can be measured as the share of foreign currency deposits in the total deposits of the banking system, and credit currency substitution can be measured as the share of dollar credit in the total credit of the banking system.[11]

Effects

On trade and investment

One of the main advantages of adopting a strong foreign currency as sole legal tender is to reduce the transaction costs of trade among countries using the same currency.[12] There are at least two ways to infer this impact from data. The first is the significantly negative effect of exchange rate volatility on trade in most cases, and the second is an association between transaction costs and the need to operate with multiple currencies.[13] Economic integration with the rest of the world becomes easier as a result of lowered transaction costs and stabler prices.[14] Rose (2000) applied the gravity model of trade and provided empirical evidence that countries sharing a common currency engage in significantly increased trade among them, and that the benefits of currency substitution for trade may be large.[15]

Countries with full currency substitution can invoke greater confidence among international investors, inducing increased investments and growth. The elimination of the currency crisis risk due to full currency substitution leads to a reduction of country risk premiums and then to lower interest rates.[14] These effects result in a higher level of investment. However, there is a positive association between currency substitution and interest rates in a dual-currency economy.[16]

On monetary and exchange rate policies

Official currency substitution helps to promote fiscal and monetary discipline and thus greater macroeconomic stability and lower inflation rates, to lower real exchange rate volatility, and possibly to deepen the financial system.[13] Firstly, currency substitution helps developing countries, providing a firm commitment to stable monetary and exchange rate policies by forcing a passive monetary policy. Adopting a strong foreign currency as legal tender will help to "eliminate the inflation-bias problem of discretionary monetary policy".[17] Secondly, official currency substitution imposes stronger financial constraint on the government by eliminating deficit financing by issuing money.[18] An empirical finding suggests that inflation has been significantly lower in economies with full currency substitution than nations with domestic currencies.[19] The expected benefit of currency substitution is the elimination of the risk of exchange rate fluctuations and a possible reduction in the country's international exposure. Currency substitution cannot eliminate the risk of an external crisis but provides steadier markets as a result of eliminating fluctuations in exchange rates.[14]

On the other hand, currency substitution leads to the loss of seigniorage revenue, the loss of monetary policy autonomy, and the loss of the exchange rate instruments. Seigniorage revenues are the profits generated when monetary authorities issue currency. When adopting a foreign currency as legal tender, a monetary authority needs to withdraw the domestic currency and give up future seigniorage revenue. The country loses the rights to its autonomous monetary and exchange rate policies, even in times of financial emergency.[14][20] For example, former chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan has stated that the central bank considers the effects of its decisions only on the US economy.[21] In a full currency substituted economy, exchange rates are indeterminate and monetary authorities cannot devalue the currency.[22] In an economy with high currency substitution, devaluation policy is less effective in changing the real exchange rate because of significant pass-through effects to domestic prices.[14] However, the cost of losing an independent monetary policy exists when domestic monetary authorities can commit an effective counter-cyclical monetary policy, stabilizing the business cycle. This cost depends adversely on the correlation between the business cycle of the client country (the economy with currency substitution) and the business cycle of the anchor country.[12] In addition, monetary authorities in economies with currency substitution diminish the liquidity assurance to their banking system.[14][23]

On banking systems

In an economy with full currency substitution, monetary authorities cannot act as lender of last resort to commercial banks by printing money. The alternatives to lending to the bank system may include taxation and issuing government debt.[24] The loss of the lender of last resort is considered a cost of full currency substitution. This cost depends on the initial level of unofficial currency substitution before moving to a full currency substituted economy. This relation is negative because in a heavily currency substituted economy, the central bank already fears difficulties in providing liquidity assurance to the banking system.[25] However, literature points out the existence of alternative mechanisms to provide liquidity insurance to banks, such as a scheme by which the international financial community charges an insurance fee in exchange for a commitment to lend to a domestic bank.[26]

Commercial banks in countries where saving accounts and loans in foreign currency are allowed may face two types of risks:

  1. Currency mismatch risk: Assets and liabilities on the balance sheets may be in different denominations. This may arise if the bank converts foreign currency deposits into local currency and lends in local currency or vice versa.
  2. Default risk: Arises if the bank uses the foreign currency deposits to lend in foreign currency.[27]

However, currency substitution eliminates the probability of a currency crisis that negatively affects the banking system through the balance sheet channel. Currency substitution may reduce the possibility of systematic liquidity shortages and the optimal reserves in the banking system.[28] Research has shown that official currency substitution has played a significant role in improving bank liquidity and asset quality in Ecuador and El Salvador.[29]

Determinants of the currency substitution process

The dynamics of the flight from domestic money

High and unanticipated inflation rates decrease the demand for domestic money and raise the demand for alternative assets, including foreign currency and assets dominated by foreign currency. This phenomenon is called the "flight from domestic money". It results in a rapid and sizable process of currency substitution.[30] In countries with high inflation rates, the domestic currency tends to be gradually displaced by a stable currency. At the beginning of this process, the store-of-value function of the domestic currency is replaced by the foreign currency. Then, the unit-of-account function of the domestic currency is displaced when many prices are quoted in a foreign currency. A prolonged period of high inflation will induce the domestic currency to lose its function as medium of exchange when the public carries out many transactions in foreign currency.[31]: 1 

Ize and Levy-Yeyati (1998) examine the determinants of deposit and credit currency substitution, concluding that currency substitution is driven by the volatility of inflation and the real exchange rate. Currency substitution increases with inflation volatility and decreases with the volatility of the real exchange rate.[32]

Institutional factors

The flight from domestic money depends on a country's institutional factors. The first factor is the level of development of the domestic financial market. An economy with a well-developed financial market can offer a set of alternative financial instruments denominated in domestic currency, reducing the role of foreign currency as an inflation hedge. The pattern of the currency substitution process also varies across countries with different foreign exchange and capital controls. In a country with strict foreign exchange regulations, the demand for foreign currency will be satisfied in the holding of foreign currency assets abroad and outside the domestic banking system. This demand often puts pressure on the parallel market of foreign currency and on the country's international reserves.[30] Evidence for this pattern is given in the absence of currency substitution during the pre-reform period in most transition economies, because of constricted controls on foreign exchange and the banking system.[31]: 13  In contrast, by increasing foreign currency reserves, a country might mitigate the shift of assets abroad and strengthen its external reserves in exchange for a currency substitution process. However, the effect of this regulation on the pattern of currency substitution depends on the public's expectations of macroeconomic stability and the sustainability of the foreign exchange regime.[30]

Anchor currencies

Australian dollar

Euro

Indian rupee

New Zealand dollar

Pound sterling

British Overseas Territories using the pound, or a local currency pegged to the pound, as their currency:

Crown Dependencies using a local issue of the pound as their currency:

Under plans published in the Sustainable Growth Commission report by the Scottish National Party, an independent Scotland would use the pound as their currency for the first 10 years of independence. This has become known as sterlingisation.

South African rand

United States dollar

Countries/regions using the United States dollar exclusively

Countries using the United States dollar alongside other currencies

Others

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ New estimates of U.S. currency abroad, the domestic money supply and the unreported Economy Edgar L. Feige September 2011.
  2. ^ Yeyati (2003) at 1.
  3. ^ Rochon, Louis-Philippe (2003). Dollarization Lessons from Europe and the Americas. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 1. ISBN 9780415298780.
  4. ^ a b Yeyati (2003) at 3.
  5. ^ a b Savastano at 7.
  6. ^ Yeyati (2003) at 5.
  7. ^ Balino; Berensztein (1999). "Monetary Policy in Dollarized Economies". IMF Occasional Paper 171.
  8. ^ Mundell, R. A. (1961). "A Theory of Optimum Currency Areas". American Economic Review. 51 (4): 657–665. JSTOR 1812792.
  9. ^ a b Bogetic (200). "Official Dollarization: Current Experiences and Issues". Cato Journal. 20 (2): 179–213.
  10. ^ Berkmen, S. Pelin; Cavallo, Eduardo (2010). "Exchange Rate Policy and Liability currency substitution: What Do the Data Reveal about Causality?". Review of International Economics. 18 (5): 781–795. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9396.2010.00890.x. S2CID 154678349.
  11. ^ Pinon, Marco (2008). Macroeconomic Implications of Financial currency substitution The Case of Uruguay. Washington DC: International Monetary Fund. p. 22.
  12. ^ a b Alesina, Alberto; Barro (2001). "Dollarization". The American Economic Review. 91 (2): 381–385. doi:10.1257/aer.91.2.381. JSTOR 2677793.
  13. ^ a b Yeyati (2003) at 22.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Berg, Andrew; Borensztein, Eduardo (2000). "The Pros and Cons of Full Dollarization". IMF Working Paper; Full Dollarization. IMF (/50). Retrieved 13 October 2011.
  15. ^ Rose, Andrew (2000). "One Money, One Market: the effect of common currencies on trade". Economic Policy. 15 (30): 8–0. doi:10.1111/1468-0327.00056.
  16. ^ Honohan, Patrick (2007). "Dollarization and Exchange Rate Fluctuations" (PDF). World Bank Policy Research Working Paper. Policy Research Working Papers (4172). doi:10.1596/1813-9450-4172. hdl:10986/7252.
  17. ^ Alesina, Alberto; Barro (2001). "Dollarization". The American Economic Review. 91 (2): 382. doi:10.1257/aer.91.2.381. JSTOR 2677793.
  18. ^ Yeyati (2003) at 23.
  19. ^ Edwards, Sebastian; Magendzo, I. Igal (2003). "Dollarization And Economic Performance: What Do We Really Know?". International Journal of Finance and Economics. 8 (4): 351–363. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.557.6231. doi:10.1002/ijfe.217.
  20. ^ Broda, Levy Yeyati, Christian, Eduardo (2003). "Endogenous deposit dollarization". Federal Reserve Bank of New York. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  21. ^ Moreno-Bird, Juan Carlos (Fall 1999). . ReVista: Harvard Review of Latin America. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  22. ^ John, Kareken; Wallace (1981). "On the Indeterminacy of Equilibrium Exchange Rates". Quarterly Journal of Economics. 96 (2): 207–222. doi:10.2307/1882388. JSTOR 1882388.
  23. ^ Yeyati, Eduardo Levy (2008). "Liquidity Insurance in a Financially Dollarized Economy". In Edwards; Garcia (eds.). Financial Markets Volatility and Performance in Emerging Markets. University of Chicago Press. pp. 185–218. ISBN 978-0-226-18495-1.
  24. ^ Bencivenga, Valerie; Huybens, Smith (2001). "Dollarization and the Integration of International Capital Markets: a Contribution to the Theory of Optimal Currency Areas". Journal of Money, Credit and Banking. 33 (2, Part 2): 548–589. doi:10.2307/2673916. JSTOR 2673916.
  25. ^ Broda, Christian; Yeyati (2001). "Dollarization and the Lender of Last Resort". Book: Dollarization: 100–131.
  26. ^ Yeyati (2003) at 31.
  27. ^ Kutan, Rengifo, Ozsoz, Ali, Erick, Emre. "Evaluating the Effects of Deposit Dollarization in Bank Profitability" (PDF). Fordham University Economics Department.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)[permanent dead link]
  28. ^ Yeyati (2003) at 34.
  29. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
  30. ^ a b c Savastano.
  31. ^ a b Sahay, Ratna; Vegh, Carlos (September 1995). "Dollarization in Transition Economies: Evidence and Policy Implications". IMF Working Paper No. 95/96. SSRN 883243.
  32. ^ Catão, Luis; Terrrones, Marco E. (August 2000). "Determinants of Dollarization: The Banking Side". IMF Working Paper No. 00/146: 5. SSRN 879949.
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Edwards, Sebastian (May 2001). "Dollarization and Economic Performance: An Empirical Investigation". NBER Working Paper No. 8274. doi:10.3386/w8274.
  34. ^ a b Ruwitch, John; Park, Ju-min (2 June 2013). "Insight: North Korean economy surrenders to foreign currency invasion". Reuters. Changbai, China/Seoul. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  35. ^ Catalog of the coins of the British Antarctic Territory Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2023-01-17.
  36. ^ Catalog of the coins of the British Indian Ocean Territory Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2023-01-17.
  37. ^ Catalog of the coins of Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2023-01-17.
  38. ^ Catalog of the coins of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2023-01-17.
  39. ^ Catalog of the coins of Alderney Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2023-01-17.
  40. ^ Catalog of the coins of the British Virgin Islands Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-09-03.
  41. ^ Catalog of the coins of the Marshall Islands Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-09-03.
  42. ^ Catalog of the coins of Palau Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-07-22.
  43. ^ Catalog of the coins of the Turks and Caicos Islands Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-09-03.
  44. ^ . lonelyplanet.com. Archived from the original on 16 April 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  45. ^ Pilling, David; Peel, Michael (28 July 2014). "Cambodia: Wave of discontent". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 11 January 2017. Dollars account for 90 per cent of money in Cambodia's banking system and almost the same proportion of cash used in everyday transactions, according to official estimates.
  46. ^ Kharpal, Arjun (9 June 2021). "El Salvador becomes first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender after passing law". CNBC. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  47. ^ Carter, Chris (8 May 2013). . Pulsamerica. Archived from the original on 13 January 2017. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  48. ^ Pinon, Marco; Gelos, Gaston (28 August 2008). "Uruguay's Monetary Policy Effective Despite Dollarization". IMF Survey Magazine. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  49. ^ Zerpa, Fabiola (5 November 2019). "Venezuela Is Now More Than 50% Dollarized, Study Finds". Bloomberg. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  50. ^ "Maduro says 'thank God' for dollarization in Venezuela". Reuters. 17 November 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  51. ^ Catalog of the coins of Artsakh Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-11-06.
  52. ^ Catalog of the banknotes of Artsakh Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-11-06.
  53. ^ Catalog of the coins of Abkhazia Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-10-14.
  54. ^ Catalog of the coins of South Ossetia Numista (https://en.numista.com). Retrieved on 2022-10-14.

Works cited

  • Savastano, Miguel (1996). "Dollarization in Latin America: Recent Evidence and Some Policy Issues". IMF Working Paper. WP/96/4. SSRN 882905.
  • Yeyati, Eduardo (2003). Dollarization. Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

currency, substitution, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, jan. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Currency substitution news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Currency substitution is the use of a foreign currency in parallel to or instead of a domestic currency 1 The process is also known as dollarization or euroization when the foreign currency is the dollar or the euro respectively Worldwide official use of foreign currency or pegs United States dollar users including the United States Currencies pegged to the United States dollar Euro users including the Eurozone Currencies pegged to the euro Australian dollar users including Australia Indian rupee users and pegs including India New Zealand dollar users including New Zealand Pound sterling users and pegs including the United Kingdom Russian ruble users including Russia and other territories South African rand users CMA including South Africa Three cases of a country using or pegging the currency of a neighbor Currency substitution can be full or partial Full currency substitution can occur after a major economic crisis such as in Ecuador El Salvador and Zimbabwe Some small economies for whom it is impractical to maintain an independent currency use the currencies of their larger neighbours for example Liechtenstein uses the Swiss franc Partial currency substitution occurs when residents of a country choose to hold a significant share of their financial assets denominated in a foreign currency It can also occur as a gradual conversion to full currency substitution for example Argentina and Peru were both in the process of converting to the U S dollar during the 1990s Contents 1 Origins 2 Measures 3 Types 4 Effects 4 1 On trade and investment 4 2 On monetary and exchange rate policies 4 3 On banking systems 5 Determinants of the currency substitution process 5 1 The dynamics of the flight from domestic money 5 2 Institutional factors 6 Anchor currencies 6 1 Australian dollar 6 2 Euro 6 3 Indian rupee 6 4 New Zealand dollar 6 5 Pound sterling 6 6 South African rand 6 7 United States dollar 6 7 1 Countries regions using the United States dollar exclusively 6 7 2 Countries using the United States dollar alongside other currencies 6 8 Others 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 Works citedOrigins Edit Map of current exchange rate regimes 2018 De facto exchange rate arrangements in 2018 as classified by the International Monetary Fund Floating floating and free floating Soft pegs conventional peg stabilized arrangement crawling peg crawl like arrangement pegged exchange rate within horizontal bands Hard pegs no separate legal tender currency board Residual other managed arrangement Main article Bretton Woods system After the gold standard was abandoned at the outbreak of World War I and the Bretton Woods Conference following World War II some countries sought exchange rate regimes to promote global economic stability and hence their own prosperity Countries usually peg their currency to a major convertible currency Hard pegs are exchange rate regimes that demonstrate a stronger commitment to a fixed parity i e currency boards or relinquish control over their own currency such as currency unions while soft pegs are more flexible and floating exchange rate regimes 2 The collapse of soft pegs in Southeast Asia and Latin America in the late 1990s led to currency substitution becoming a serious policy issue 3 A few cases of full currency substitution prior to 1999 had been the consequence of political and historical factors In all long standing currency substitution cases historical and political reasons have been more influential than an evaluation of the economic effects of currency substitution 4 Panama adopted the US dollar as legal tender after independence as the result of a constitutional ruling 5 Ecuador and El Salvador became fully dollarized economies in 2000 and 2001 respectively for different reasons 4 Ecuador underwent currency substitution to deal with a widespread political and financial crisis resulting from massive loss of confidence in its political and monetary institutions By contrast El Salvador s official currency substitution was a result of internal debates and in a context of stable macroeconomic fundamentals and long standing unofficial currency substitution The eurozone adopted the euro as its common currency and sole legal tender in 1999 which might be considered a variety of full commitment regime similar to full currency substitution despite some evident differences from other currency substitutions 6 Measures EditThere are two common indicators of currency substitution The first measure is the share of foreign currency deposits FCD in the domestic banking system in the broad money including FCD The second is the share of all foreign currency deposits held by domestic residents at home and abroad in their total monetary assets 5 Types EditUnofficial currency substitution or de facto currency substitution is the most common type of currency substitution Unofficial currency substitution occurs when residents of a country choose to hold a significant share of their financial assets in foreign currency even though the foreign currency is not legal tender there 7 They hold deposits in the foreign currency because of a bad track record of the local currency or as a hedge against inflation of the domestic currency Official currency substitution or full currency substitution happens when a country adopts a foreign currency as its sole legal tender and ceases to issue the domestic currency Another effect of a country adopting a foreign currency as its own is that the country gives up all power to vary its exchange rate There are a small number of countries adopting a foreign currency as legal tender Full currency substitution has mostly occurred in Latin America the Caribbean and the Pacific as many countries in those regions see the United States Dollar as a stable currency compared to the national one 8 For example Panama underwent full currency substitution by adopting the US dollar as legal tender in 1904 This type of currency substitution is also known as de jure currency substitution Currency substitution can be used semiofficially or officially bimonetary systems where the foreign currency is legal tender alongside the domestic currency 9 In literature there is a set of related definitions of currency substitution such as external liability currency substitution domestic liability currency substitution banking sector s liability currency substitution or deposit currency substitution and credit dollarization External liability currency substitution measures total external debt private and public denominated in foreign currencies of the economy 9 10 Deposit currency substitution can be measured as the share of foreign currency deposits in the total deposits of the banking system and credit currency substitution can be measured as the share of dollar credit in the total credit of the banking system 11 Effects EditOn trade and investment Edit One of the main advantages of adopting a strong foreign currency as sole legal tender is to reduce the transaction costs of trade among countries using the same currency 12 There are at least two ways to infer this impact from data The first is the significantly negative effect of exchange rate volatility on trade in most cases and the second is an association between transaction costs and the need to operate with multiple currencies 13 Economic integration with the rest of the world becomes easier as a result of lowered transaction costs and stabler prices 14 Rose 2000 applied the gravity model of trade and provided empirical evidence that countries sharing a common currency engage in significantly increased trade among them and that the benefits of currency substitution for trade may be large 15 Countries with full currency substitution can invoke greater confidence among international investors inducing increased investments and growth The elimination of the currency crisis risk due to full currency substitution leads to a reduction of country risk premiums and then to lower interest rates 14 These effects result in a higher level of investment However there is a positive association between currency substitution and interest rates in a dual currency economy 16 On monetary and exchange rate policies Edit Official currency substitution helps to promote fiscal and monetary discipline and thus greater macroeconomic stability and lower inflation rates to lower real exchange rate volatility and possibly to deepen the financial system 13 Firstly currency substitution helps developing countries providing a firm commitment to stable monetary and exchange rate policies by forcing a passive monetary policy Adopting a strong foreign currency as legal tender will help to eliminate the inflation bias problem of discretionary monetary policy 17 Secondly official currency substitution imposes stronger financial constraint on the government by eliminating deficit financing by issuing money 18 An empirical finding suggests that inflation has been significantly lower in economies with full currency substitution than nations with domestic currencies 19 The expected benefit of currency substitution is the elimination of the risk of exchange rate fluctuations and a possible reduction in the country s international exposure Currency substitution cannot eliminate the risk of an external crisis but provides steadier markets as a result of eliminating fluctuations in exchange rates 14 On the other hand currency substitution leads to the loss of seigniorage revenue the loss of monetary policy autonomy and the loss of the exchange rate instruments Seigniorage revenues are the profits generated when monetary authorities issue currency When adopting a foreign currency as legal tender a monetary authority needs to withdraw the domestic currency and give up future seigniorage revenue The country loses the rights to its autonomous monetary and exchange rate policies even in times of financial emergency 14 20 For example former chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan has stated that the central bank considers the effects of its decisions only on the US economy 21 In a full currency substituted economy exchange rates are indeterminate and monetary authorities cannot devalue the currency 22 In an economy with high currency substitution devaluation policy is less effective in changing the real exchange rate because of significant pass through effects to domestic prices 14 However the cost of losing an independent monetary policy exists when domestic monetary authorities can commit an effective counter cyclical monetary policy stabilizing the business cycle This cost depends adversely on the correlation between the business cycle of the client country the economy with currency substitution and the business cycle of the anchor country 12 In addition monetary authorities in economies with currency substitution diminish the liquidity assurance to their banking system 14 23 On banking systems Edit In an economy with full currency substitution monetary authorities cannot act as lender of last resort to commercial banks by printing money The alternatives to lending to the bank system may include taxation and issuing government debt 24 The loss of the lender of last resort is considered a cost of full currency substitution This cost depends on the initial level of unofficial currency substitution before moving to a full currency substituted economy This relation is negative because in a heavily currency substituted economy the central bank already fears difficulties in providing liquidity assurance to the banking system 25 However literature points out the existence of alternative mechanisms to provide liquidity insurance to banks such as a scheme by which the international financial community charges an insurance fee in exchange for a commitment to lend to a domestic bank 26 Commercial banks in countries where saving accounts and loans in foreign currency are allowed may face two types of risks Currency mismatch risk Assets and liabilities on the balance sheets may be in different denominations This may arise if the bank converts foreign currency deposits into local currency and lends in local currency or vice versa Default risk Arises if the bank uses the foreign currency deposits to lend in foreign currency 27 However currency substitution eliminates the probability of a currency crisis that negatively affects the banking system through the balance sheet channel Currency substitution may reduce the possibility of systematic liquidity shortages and the optimal reserves in the banking system 28 Research has shown that official currency substitution has played a significant role in improving bank liquidity and asset quality in Ecuador and El Salvador 29 Determinants of the currency substitution process EditThe dynamics of the flight from domestic money Edit High and unanticipated inflation rates decrease the demand for domestic money and raise the demand for alternative assets including foreign currency and assets dominated by foreign currency This phenomenon is called the flight from domestic money It results in a rapid and sizable process of currency substitution 30 In countries with high inflation rates the domestic currency tends to be gradually displaced by a stable currency At the beginning of this process the store of value function of the domestic currency is replaced by the foreign currency Then the unit of account function of the domestic currency is displaced when many prices are quoted in a foreign currency A prolonged period of high inflation will induce the domestic currency to lose its function as medium of exchange when the public carries out many transactions in foreign currency 31 1 Ize and Levy Yeyati 1998 examine the determinants of deposit and credit currency substitution concluding that currency substitution is driven by the volatility of inflation and the real exchange rate Currency substitution increases with inflation volatility and decreases with the volatility of the real exchange rate 32 Institutional factors Edit The flight from domestic money depends on a country s institutional factors The first factor is the level of development of the domestic financial market An economy with a well developed financial market can offer a set of alternative financial instruments denominated in domestic currency reducing the role of foreign currency as an inflation hedge The pattern of the currency substitution process also varies across countries with different foreign exchange and capital controls In a country with strict foreign exchange regulations the demand for foreign currency will be satisfied in the holding of foreign currency assets abroad and outside the domestic banking system This demand often puts pressure on the parallel market of foreign currency and on the country s international reserves 30 Evidence for this pattern is given in the absence of currency substitution during the pre reform period in most transition economies because of constricted controls on foreign exchange and the banking system 31 13 In contrast by increasing foreign currency reserves a country might mitigate the shift of assets abroad and strengthen its external reserves in exchange for a currency substitution process However the effect of this regulation on the pattern of currency substitution depends on the public s expectations of macroeconomic stability and the sustainability of the foreign exchange regime 30 Anchor currencies EditAustralian dollar Edit Main article Australian dollar Kiribati since 1943 Also uses its own coins 33 17 Nauru since 1914 33 17 Tuvalu since 1892 Also uses its own coins 33 17 Euro Edit Main article EuroMain article International status and usage of the euro Andorra formerly French franc and Spanish peseta issued non circulating Andorran diner coins issues its own euro coins Has used French and Spanish currency since 1278 33 17 Kosovo formerly German mark and Yugoslav dinar Monaco formerly French franc from 1865 2002 and Monegasque franc 33 17 issues its own euro coins Montenegro formerly German mark and Yugoslav dinar North Korea along with the Renminbi United States dollar and North Korean won 34 San Marino formerly Italian lira and Sammarinese lira issues its own euro coins Vatican City formerly Italian lira and Vatican lira issues its own euro coins Zimbabwe Alongside United States dollar South African rand Botswana pula several other currencies and US dollar denominated bond coins and bond notes of the Real Time Gross Settlement RTGS dollar Indian rupee Edit Main article Indian rupee Bhutan Alongside Bhutanese ngultrum pegged at par with the rupee Nepal Alongside the Nepali rupee pegged at 0 625 Zimbabwe Alongside the United States dollar euro Renminbi Botswana pula several other currencies and US dollar denominated bond coins and bond notes of the Real Time Gross Settlement RTGS dollar New Zealand dollar Edit Main article New Zealand dollar Cook Islands issues its own coins and some notes Niue Also issues its own non circulating commemorative and collector coins minted at the New Zealand Mint pegged to the New Zealand dollar Pitcairn Islands Also issues its own non circulating commemorative and collector coins pegged to the New Zealand dollar Tokelau Also issues its own non circulating commemorative and collector coins pegged to the New Zealand dollar Pound sterling Edit Further information Pound sterling British Overseas Territories using the pound or a local currency pegged to the pound as their currency British Antarctic Territory issues non circulating collector coins for the British Antarctic Terriroty 35 British Indian Ocean Territory de jure U S dollar used de facto also issues non circulating collector coins for the British Indian Ocean Territory 36 Falkland Islands alongside the Falkland Islands pound Gibraltar alongside the Gibraltar pound Saint Helena Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Tristan da Cunha alongside the Saint Helena pound in Saint Helena and Ascension also issues non circulating collector coins for Saint Helena Ascension and Tristan da Cunha 37 South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands alongside the Falkland Islands pound also issues non circulating collector coins for South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands 38 Crown Dependencies using a local issue of the pound as their currency Guernsey Guernsey pound Alderney issues non circulating Alderney pound collector coins backed by both the Pound sterling and Guernsey pound 39 Isle of Man Manx pound Jersey Jersey pound Under plans published in the Sustainable Growth Commission report by the Scottish National Party an independent Scotland would use the pound as their currency for the first 10 years of independence This has become known as sterlingisation South African rand Edit Further information Common Monetary Area Eswatini Alongside Swazi lilangeni Lesotho alongside Lesotho loti Namibia Alongside Namibian dollar Zimbabwe Alongside the United States dollar euro Renminbi Botswana pula several other currencies and US dollar denominated bond coins and bond notes of the Real Time Gross Settlement RTGS dollar United States dollar Edit Main articles United States dollar and International use of the U S dollar Countries regions using the United States dollar exclusively Edit British Virgin Islands also issues non circulating British Virgin Islands collector coins pegged to the U S dollar 40 Caribbean Netherlands since 1 January 2011 Marshall Islands has issued non circulating collector coins of the Marshall Islands pegged to the U S dollar since 1986 41 Federated States of Micronesia since 1944 33 17 Palau since 1944 has issued non circulating Palauan collector coins pegged to the U S dollar since 1992 33 42 Turks and Caicos Islands has issued non circulating Turks and Caicos Islands collector coins denominated in Crowns and pegged to the U S dollar 43 Countries using the United States dollar alongside other currencies Edit Argentina USD is used for major purchases such as buying properties The Bahamas Bahamian dollar pegged at 1 1 but USD is accepted Barbados Barbadian dollar pegged at 2 1 but USD is accepted Belize Belizean dollar pegged at 2 1 but USD is accepted Bermuda Bermudian dollar pegged at 1 1 but USD is accepted Cambodia uses the Cambodian riel for many official transactions but most businesses deal exclusively in dollars for all but the cheapest items Change is often given in a combination of US dollars and Cambodian riel ATMs yield US dollars rather than Cambodian riel 44 45 Costa Rica East Timor uses its own coins Ecuador since 2000 Also uses its own coins 33 1 El Salvador both the U S dollar and bitcoin are legal tender 46 Haiti uses the U S dollar alongside its domestic currency the gourde Honduras used alongside the Honduran lempira 47 Iraq Lebanon along with the Lebanese pound Liberia exclusively used the US dollar during the early PRC period but the National Bank of Liberia began issuing five dollar coins in 1982 33 3 United States dollar still in common usage alongside the Liberian dollar North Korea along with the Renminbi euro and North Korean won 34 Panama since 1904 Also uses its own coins 33 6 Somalia along with the Somali shilling Uruguay 48 Venezuela along with the Venezuelan bolivar due to hyperinflation USD is used for purchases such as buying electrical appliances clothes spare car parts and food 49 50 Vietnam along with the Vietnamese đồng Zimbabwe since 2020 alongside South African rand British pound Botswana pula Renminbi several other currencies and US dollar denominated bond coins and bond notes under the Real Time Gross Settlement RTGS dollar Others Edit Armenian dram Republic of Artsakh occupied by Armenia but claimed by Azerbaijan also issues its own non circulating currency for collectors 51 52 Brunei dollar Brunei and Singapore Alongside Singapore dollar and vice versa Danish krone Greenland and Faroe Islands the latter issues its own coins and some notes Hong Kong dollar Hong Kong and Macau Alongside Macanese pataca pegged at 1 032 Egyptian pound Palestinian territories New Israeli shekel Palestinian territories Jordanian dinar West Bank Alongside the New Israeli shekel Russian ruble Abkhazia and South Ossetia de facto independent states but recognized as part of Georgia issues non circulating collector coins Abkhazian apsar and South Ossetian zarin pegged to the Russian ruble 53 54 Swiss franc Liechtenstein also issues non circulating Liechtenstein franc collector coins Turkish lira Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus de facto independent state but recognized as part of Cyprus by all states but Turkey See also EditCurrency union Currency board Domestic liability dollarization Petrocurrency Bitcoin a cryptocurrency World currencyReferences EditFootnotes Edit New estimates of U S currency abroad the domestic money supply and the unreported Economy Edgar L Feige September 2011 Yeyati 2003 at 1 Rochon Louis Philippe 2003 Dollarization Lessons from Europe and the Americas London and New York Routledge pp 1 ISBN 9780415298780 a b Yeyati 2003 at 3 a b Savastano at 7 Yeyati 2003 at 5 Balino Berensztein 1999 Monetary Policy in Dollarized Economies IMF Occasional Paper 171 Mundell R A 1961 A Theory of Optimum Currency Areas American Economic Review 51 4 657 665 JSTOR 1812792 a b Bogetic 200 Official Dollarization Current Experiences and Issues Cato Journal 20 2 179 213 Berkmen S Pelin Cavallo Eduardo 2010 Exchange Rate Policy and Liability currency substitution What Do the Data Reveal about Causality Review of International Economics 18 5 781 795 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9396 2010 00890 x S2CID 154678349 Pinon Marco 2008 Macroeconomic Implications of Financial currency substitution The Case of Uruguay Washington DC International Monetary Fund p 22 a b Alesina Alberto Barro 2001 Dollarization The American Economic Review 91 2 381 385 doi 10 1257 aer 91 2 381 JSTOR 2677793 a b Yeyati 2003 at 22 a b c d e f Berg Andrew Borensztein Eduardo 2000 The Pros and Cons of Full Dollarization IMF Working Paper Full Dollarization IMF 50 Retrieved 13 October 2011 Rose Andrew 2000 One Money One Market the effect of common currencies on trade Economic Policy 15 30 8 0 doi 10 1111 1468 0327 00056 Honohan Patrick 2007 Dollarization and Exchange Rate Fluctuations PDF World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Policy Research Working Papers 4172 doi 10 1596 1813 9450 4172 hdl 10986 7252 Alesina Alberto Barro 2001 Dollarization The American Economic Review 91 2 382 doi 10 1257 aer 91 2 381 JSTOR 2677793 Yeyati 2003 at 23 Edwards Sebastian Magendzo I Igal 2003 Dollarization And Economic Performance What Do We Really Know International Journal of Finance and Economics 8 4 351 363 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 557 6231 doi 10 1002 ijfe 217 Broda Levy Yeyati Christian Eduardo 2003 Endogenous deposit dollarization Federal Reserve Bank of New York a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Moreno Bird Juan Carlos Fall 1999 Dollarization in Latin America Is it desirable ReVista Harvard Review of Latin America Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2012 John Kareken Wallace 1981 On the Indeterminacy of Equilibrium Exchange Rates Quarterly Journal of Economics 96 2 207 222 doi 10 2307 1882388 JSTOR 1882388 Yeyati Eduardo Levy 2008 Liquidity Insurance in a Financially Dollarized Economy In Edwards Garcia eds Financial Markets Volatility and Performance in Emerging Markets University of Chicago Press pp 185 218 ISBN 978 0 226 18495 1 Bencivenga Valerie Huybens Smith 2001 Dollarization and the Integration of International Capital Markets a Contribution to the Theory of Optimal Currency Areas Journal of Money Credit and Banking 33 2 Part 2 548 589 doi 10 2307 2673916 JSTOR 2673916 Broda Christian Yeyati 2001 Dollarization and the Lender of Last Resort Book Dollarization 100 131 Yeyati 2003 at 31 Kutan Rengifo Ozsoz Ali Erick Emre Evaluating the Effects of Deposit Dollarization in Bank Profitability PDF Fordham University Economics Department a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link permanent dead link Yeyati 2003 at 34 Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Official Dollarization and the Banking System in Ecuador and El Salvador 2006 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2012 Retrieved 14 September 2012 a b c Savastano a b Sahay Ratna Vegh Carlos September 1995 Dollarization in Transition Economies Evidence and Policy Implications IMF Working Paper No 95 96 SSRN 883243 Catao Luis Terrrones Marco E August 2000 Determinants of Dollarization The Banking Side IMF Working Paper No 00 146 5 SSRN 879949 a b c d e f g h i j Edwards Sebastian May 2001 Dollarization and Economic Performance An Empirical Investigation NBER Working Paper No 8274 doi 10 3386 w8274 a b Ruwitch John Park Ju min 2 June 2013 Insight North Korean economy surrenders to foreign currency invasion Reuters Changbai China Seoul Retrieved 11 January 2017 Catalog of the coins of the British Antarctic Territory Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2023 01 17 Catalog of the coins of the British Indian Ocean Territory Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2023 01 17 Catalog of the coins of Saint Helena Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2023 01 17 Catalog of the coins of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2023 01 17 Catalog of the coins of Alderney Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2023 01 17 Catalog of the coins of the British Virgin Islands Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 09 03 Catalog of the coins of the Marshall Islands Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 09 03 Catalog of the coins of Palau Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 07 22 Catalog of the coins of the Turks and Caicos Islands Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 09 03 Money amp Cost lonelyplanet com Archived from the original on 16 April 2014 Retrieved 13 December 2013 Pilling David Peel Michael 28 July 2014 Cambodia Wave of discontent Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 11 January 2017 Dollars account for 90 per cent of money in Cambodia s banking system and almost the same proportion of cash used in everyday transactions according to official estimates Kharpal Arjun 9 June 2021 El Salvador becomes first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender after passing law CNBC Retrieved 9 June 2021 Carter Chris 8 May 2013 Economy The effect of dollarisation in Honduras Pulsamerica Archived from the original on 13 January 2017 Retrieved 11 January 2017 Pinon Marco Gelos Gaston 28 August 2008 Uruguay s Monetary Policy Effective Despite Dollarization IMF Survey Magazine Retrieved 4 March 2012 Zerpa Fabiola 5 November 2019 Venezuela Is Now More Than 50 Dollarized Study Finds Bloomberg Retrieved 9 November 2019 Maduro says thank God for dollarization in Venezuela Reuters 17 November 2019 Retrieved 18 November 2019 Catalog of the coins of Artsakh Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 11 06 Catalog of the banknotes of Artsakh Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 11 06 Catalog of the coins of Abkhazia Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 10 14 Catalog of the coins of South Ossetia Numista https en numista com Retrieved on 2022 10 14 Works cited Edit Savastano Miguel 1996 Dollarization in Latin America Recent Evidence and Some Policy Issues IMF Working Paper WP 96 4 SSRN 882905 Yeyati Eduardo 2003 Dollarization Massachusetts Institute of Technology Portals Money Numismatics Retrieved from https en 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