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Special drawing rights

Special drawing rights (SDRs, code XDR) are supplementary foreign exchange reserve assets defined and maintained by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).[1] SDRs are units of account for the IMF, and not a currency per se.[2] They represent a claim to currency held by IMF member countries for which they may be exchanged.[3] SDRs were created in 1969 to supplement a shortfall of preferred foreign exchange reserve assets, namely gold and U.S. dollars.[3] The ISO 4217 currency code for special drawing rights is XDR and the numeric code is 960.[4]

Special drawing rights
ISO 4217
CodeXDR (numeric: 960)
Unit
SymbolSDR
Demographics
Date of introduction1969
User(s)IMF
Valuation
Pegged withU.S. dollar, euro, Chinese yuan, Japanese yen, and pound sterling

SDRs are allocated by the IMF to countries,[3] and cannot be held or used by private parties.[5] The number of SDRs in existence was around XDR 21.4 billion in August 2009. During the global financial crisis of 2009, an additional XDR 182.6 billion was allocated to "provide liquidity to the global economic system and supplement member countries' official reserves". By October 2014, the number of SDRs in existence was XDR 204 billion.[6] Due to economic stress caused by the COVID-19 pandemic some economists and several finance ministers of poorer countries have called for a new allocation of $4T to support member economies as they seek ways to recover.[7] In March 2021 the G24 and others proposed an allocation of $500B for this purpose.[8] In response, XDR 456.5 billion (about US$650B) was allocated on August 23, 2021.[9]

The value of a SDR is based on a basket of key international currencies reviewed by IMF every five years.[3] The weights assigned to the currencies in the XDR basket are adjusted to take into account their current prominence in terms of international trade and national foreign exchange reserves.[3] Currently, the XDR basket consists of the following five currencies: U.S. dollar 43.38%, euro 29.31%, renminbi (Chinese yuan) 12.28%, Japanese yen 7.59%, British pound sterling 7.44%.

Name

While the ISO 4217 currency code for special drawing rights is XDR,[4] they are often referred to by their acronym SDR. The name was chosen as a compromise between parties who wanted an international currency and those who wanted a credit facility.[10] Member countries receiving XDR allocations were required by the reconstitution provision of the XDR articles to hold a prescribed number of XDRs. If a state used any of its allotment, it was expected to rebuild its XDR holdings. As the reconstitution provisions were abrogated in 1981, the XDR now functions less like credit than previously.[11] Countries are still expected to maintain their XDR holdings at a certain level, but penalties for holding fewer than the allocated amount are now less onerous.[3]

The name may actually derive from an early proposal for IMF "reserve drawing rights".[12] The word "reserve" was later replaced with "special" because the idea that the IMF was creating a foreign exchange reserve asset was contentious.[13]

History

Special drawing rights were created by the IMF in 1969 and were intended to be an asset held in foreign exchange reserves under the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates.[3] After the collapse of that system in the early 1970s, the XDR has taken on a less important role.[14] Acting as the unit of account for the IMF has been its primary purpose[2] since 1972.[15]

The IMF itself calls the current role of the XDR "insignificant".[16] Developed countries, who hold the greatest number of XDRs, are unlikely to use them for any purpose.[10] The only actual users of XDRs may be those developing countries that see them as "a rather cheap line of credit".[17]

One reason XDRs may not see much use as foreign exchange reserve assets is that they must be exchanged into a currency before use.[5] This is due in part to the fact private parties do not hold XDRs:[5] they are only used and held by IMF member countries, the IMF itself, and a select few organizations licensed to do so by the IMF.[18] Basic functions of foreign exchange reserves, such as market intervention and liquidity provision, as well as some less prosaic ones, such as maintaining export competitiveness via favorable exchange rates, cannot be accomplished directly using XDRs.[19] This fact has led the IMF to label the XDR as an "imperfect reserve asset".[20]

Another reason they may see little use is that the number of XDRs in existence is relatively few. As of January 2011, XDRs represented less than 4% of global foreign exchange reserve assets.[21] To function well a foreign exchange reserve asset must have sufficient liquidity, but XDRs, because of their small number, may be perceived to be an illiquid asset. The IMF says, "expanding the volume of official XDRs is a prerequisite for them to play a more meaningful role as a substitute reserve asset."[21]

Alternative to U.S. dollar

The XDR comes to prominence when the U.S. dollar is weak or otherwise unsuitable to be a foreign exchange reserve asset. This usually manifests itself as an allocation of XDRs to IMF member countries. Distrust of the U.S. dollar is not the only stated reason allocations have been made, however. One of its first roles was to alleviate an expected shortfall of U.S. dollars c. 1970.[15] At this time, the United States had a conservative monetary policy[15] and did not want to increase the total amount of U.S. dollars in existence.[citation needed] If the United States had continued down this path, the dollar would have become a less attractive foreign exchange reserve asset: it would not have had the necessary liquidity to serve this function. Soon after XDR allocations began, the United States reversed its former policy and provided sufficient liquidity.[15] In the process a potential role for the XDR was removed. During this first round of allocations, 9.3 billion XDRs were distributed to IMF member countries.

The XDR resurfaced in 1978 when many countries were wary of taking on more foreign exchange reserve assets denominated in U.S. dollars. This suspicion of the dollar precipitated an allocation of 12 billion XDRs over a period of four years.[11]

Concomitant with the financial crisis of 2007–08, the third round of XDR allocations occurred in the years 2009[3] and 2011.[22] The IMF recognized the financial crisis as the cause for distributing the large majority of these third-round allotments, but some allocations were couched as distributing XDRs to countries that had never received any[3] and others as a re-balancing of IMF quotas, which determine how many XDRs a country is allotted, to better represent the economic strength of emerging markets.[22]

During this time China, a country with large holdings of U.S. dollar foreign exchange reserves,[23] voiced its displeasure at the current international monetary system, and promoted measures that would allow the XDR to "fully satisfy the member countries' demand for a reserve currency."[24] These comments, made by a chairman of the People's Bank of China, Zhou Xiaochuan, drew media attention,[25] and the IMF showed some support for China's stance. It produced a paper exploring ways the substance and function of the XDR could be increased.[16] China has also suggested the creation of a substitution account to allow exchange of U.S. dollars into XDRs.[10] When substitution was proposed before, in 1978, the United States appeared reluctant to allow such a mechanism to become operational.[11]

Use by developing countries

In 2001, the UN suggested allocating XDRs to developing countries for use by them as cost-free alternatives to building foreign exchange reserves through borrowing or running current account surpluses.[26] In 2009, an XDR allocation was made to countries that had joined the IMF after the 1979–1981 round of allocations was complete (and so had never been allocated any).[3] First proposed in 1997,[27] many of the beneficiaries of this 2009 allocation were developing countries.[a]

COVID-19 Pandemic

On August 23, 2021, the IMF allocated $650 billion worth of XDRs to all 190 members of the IMF in proportion to member quotas in response to COVID-19 related balance of payments concerns. This allocation of XDRs represents roughly 2/3rds of all XDRs currently in circulation, and was by far the largest ever single allocation of XDRs.[61]

Value definition

Currency basket

To determine the composition of the XDR, the IMF takes into account several currencies important to the world's trading and financial systems. A currency's importance is currently measured by two factors: the amount of exports sold in that currency, and whether that currency is considered "freely usable" (determined by its use as a foreign exchange reserve asset and how widely it is used in international transactions).[3]

An XDR basket definition remains valid for five years. Approximately one to two months before the end of this time period, the IMF Executive Board will re-evaluate the XDR basket; the currencies included as well as their weights can then change.[62] Changing the XDR's value definition requires at least 70% of the votes among the IMF members.[63] The changes take effect at the end of the five-year period (one to two months after the board review). One business day before taking effect, the newly defined weights are converted to currency amounts based on an average of the exchange rate over the past three months, such that the value of the XDR in U.S. dollars remains the same before and after the change. The currency amounts then remain fixed throughout the five-year period.[63]

The IMF reserves the right to perform a re-evaluation after less than five years if it decides that the current basket no longer reflects "the relative importance of currencies in the world’s trading and financial systems";[3] it also reserves the right to postpone re-evaluations. If either occurs (causing the old definition to be valid for less or more than five years), the new definition will still be valid for a full five years.

Historical valuation

At the time of the XDR's creation in 1969, the United States dollar was backed by the gold standard and the XDR was fixed at 1/35 troy ounce of gold or exactly 1 US dollar.[10] After the Nixon Shock of 1971 and during the collapse of the Bretton Woods system between 1971 and 1973, the XDR initially remained at 1 US dollar (even as its value relative to gold dropped to 1/38 troy ounce in 1972 and 1/42.22 troy ounce in 1973).[64] On July 1, 1974, the XDR instead became defined by a currency basket of 16 currencies.[15]

On January 1, 1981, the five-year schedule was introduced and the XDR basket was reduced to five currencies: the United States dollar, the Deutsche mark, the French franc, the British pound, and the Japanese yen.[65] When the euro was introduced in January 1999, it replaced the German mark and French franc and the basket consisted of four currencies.[3]

In November 2010, the IMF determined that the Chinese yuan met the export requirement but failed to meet the "freely usable" requirement and thus was not included in the XDR basket taking effect on January 1, 2011. In November 2015, the IMF announced that the Chinese yuan now met the "freely usable" requirement and would be included in the next basket definition, changing its size back to five currencies. The effective date of the re-evaluation was postponed to October 1, 2016, in order to "allow users sufficient lead time to adjust".[66][67]

In March 2021, the IMF announced that the next re-evaluation, normally scheduled for October 1, 2021, would be postponed to August 1, 2022, in order to prevent the basket's definition from changing during the COVID-19 pandemic.[68]

Value of 1 XDR[b]
Period XAU
1969–1971[10] 1/35 (100%)
 USD
1971–1974[64] 1.0 (100%)
  USD  DEM  GBP  FRF   ITL  JPY   CAD   NLG   BEF   SAR   ESP   AUD   SEK   IRR   NOK   ATS
1974–1980[69] 0.4 (32.6%) 0.32 (10.2%) 0.05 (9.7%) 0.42 (7.1%) 52.0 (6.6%) 21.0 (6.0%) 0.07 (5.9%) 0.14 (4.3%) 1.6 (3.5%) 0.13 (3.0%) 1.5 (2.1%) 0.017 (2.1%) 0.11 (2.1%) 1.7 (2.0%) 0.1 (1.5%) 0.28 (1.3%)
 USD  DEM  FRF  JPY  GBP
1981–1985[64] 0.54 (42%) 0.46 (19%) 0.74 (13%) 34.0 (13%) 0.071 (13%)
1986–1990[64] 0.452 (42%) 0.527 (19%) 1.02 (12%) 33.4 (15%) 0.0893 (12%)
1991–1995[64] 0.572 (40%) 0.453 (21%) 0.8 (11%) 31.8 (17%) 0.0812 (11%)
1996–1998[64] 0.582 (39%) 0.446 (21%) 0.813 (11%) 27.2 (18%) 0.105 (11%)
 USD  EUR  JPY  GBP
1999–2000[64] 0.582 (39%) 0.3519 (32%)[70] 27.2 (18%) 0.105 (11%)
2001–2005[64] 0.577 (44%) 0.426 (31%) 21.0 (14%) 0.0984 (11%)
2006–2010[62] 0.632 (44%) 0.41 (34%) 18.4 (11%) 0.0903 (11%)
2011–2016[62] 0.68 (41.9%) 0.423 (37.4%) 12.1 (9.4%) 0.111 (11.3%)
 USD  EUR  CNY  JPY  GBP
2016–2022[71] 0.58252 (41.73%) 0.38671 (30.93%) 1.0174 (10.92%) 11.9 (8.33%) 0.085946 (8.09%)
2022–2027[72] 0.57813 (43.38%) 0.37379 (29.31%) 1.0993 (12.28%) 13.452 (7.59%) 0.080870 (7.44%)

Daily valuation

Because of fluctuating exchange rates, the relative value of each currency varies continuously, as does the value of the XDR. The IMF sets the value of the XDR in terms of U.S. dollars every day. The latest U.S. dollar valuation of the XDR is published on the IMF website.[73] For example, on January 31, 2021, the value was US$1.44080, and on June 22, 2021, the value was US$1.426480.[74]

Allocations

SDRs are allocated to member countries by the IMF. A country's IMF quota, the maximum amount of financial resources that it is obligated to contribute to the fund, determines its allotment of XDRs.[3] Any new allocations must be voted on in the XDR Department of the IMF and pass with an 85% majority.[20] All IMF member countries are represented in the XDR Department,[18] but this is not a one country, one vote system; voting power is determined by a member country's IMF quota.[75] For example, the United States has 16.7% of the vote as of March 2, 2011.[76]

Allocations are not made on a regular basis and have only occurred on rare occasions. The first round took place because of a situation that was soon reversed, the possibility of an insufficient amount of U.S. dollars because of U.S. reluctance to run the deficit necessary to supply future demand. Extraordinary circumstances have, likewise, led to the other XDR allocation events. For example, during the global financial crisis of 2009, XDR 182.6 billion was allocated to "provide liquidity to the global economic system and supplement member countries’ official reserves". The 2011 allocations were to low-income member countries.[22]

Date Amount
1970–1972[15] XDR 9.3 billion[3]
1979–1981[3] XDR 12.1 billion[3]
28 August 2009[3] XDR 161.2 billion[3]
9 September 2009[c] XDR 21.4 billion[3]
Sometime after 3 March 2011[d] XDR 20.8 billion[22]
23 August 2021[3] XDR 456.5 billion[3]

Exchange

An IMF member country that requires actual foreign currency may sell its SDRs to another member country in exchange for the currency. To sell a part or all its SDRs, the country must find a willing party to buy them.[11] The IMF acts as an intermediary in this voluntary exchange.

The IMF also has the authority under the designation mechanism to ask member countries with strong foreign exchange reserves to purchase XDRs from those with weak reserves.[3] The maximum obligation any country has under this mechanism is currently equal to twice the amount of its SDR allocation.[19] As of 2015, XDRs may only be exchanged for euros, Japanese yen, UK pounds, or US dollars.[19] The IMF says exchanging XDRs can take "several days."[77]

It is not, however, the IMF that pays out foreign currency in exchange for XDRs: the claim to currency that XDRs represent is not a claim on the IMF.[3]

Interest rate

The IMF calculates a weekly interest rate, which is based on "a weighted average of representative interest rates on short-term debt in the money markets of the XDR basket currencies". No interest is payable on the SDRs allocated to a country by the IMF. However, interest is payable by an IMF member country that has exchanged (sold) some or all of the SDRs it was allocated, and interest is paid to a member country that holds more SDRs than it was allocated (i.e., the country that bought SDRs from another member).[3]

Other uses

The XDR is used in international transactions, including export quotas in the IMF members and the number of official reserve assets which were in their own currencies. It is traded on the main foreign exchange market, including foreign exchange trading volume, whether there are forward exchange markets.[3]

Unit of account

Some international organizations use the XDR as a unit of account.[78] The IMF says using the XDR in this way "help[s] cope with exchange rate volatility."[20] As of 2001, organizations that use the XDR as a unit of account, besides the IMF itself, include: Universal Postal Union,[79] African Development Bank, Arab Monetary Fund, Asian Development Bank, Bank for International Settlements,[80] Common Fund for Commodities, East African Development Bank, Economic Community of West African States, International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes, International Fund for Agricultural Development, and Islamic Development Bank.[81] It is not only international organizations that use the XDR in this way. JETRO uses XDRs to price foreign aid.[82] In addition, charges, liabilities, and fees prescribed by some international treaties are denominated in XDRs.[83] In 2003, the Bank for International Settlements ceased to use the gold franc as their currency, in favour of XDR.

Some bonds are also denominated in SDR, like the IBRD 2016 SDR denominated bonds.[84]

Use in international law

In some international treaties and agreements, XDRs are used to value penalties, charges or prices. For example, the Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Claims caps personal liability for damages to ships at XDR 330,000.[85] The Montreal Convention and other treaties also use XDRs in this way, capping damages at XDR 128,821.[86]

Use as currency

According to the IMF, "the SDR may not be any country’s optimal basket",[80] but a few countries do peg their currencies to the XDR. One possible benefit to nations with XDR pegs is that they may be perceived to be more transparent.[80] As of 2000, the number of countries that did so was four.[87] This is a substantial decrease from 1983, when 14 countries had XDR pegs.[78] As of 2010, Syria pegs its pound to the XDR.[88][89]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Countries that joined the IMF post-1981 include: Albania (1991),[28] Angola (1989),[29] Antigua and Barbuda (1982),[30] Armenia (1992),[31] Azerbaijan (1992),[32] Belarus (1992),[33] Belize (1982),[34] Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992),[35] Brunei Darussalam (1995),[36] Bulgaria (1990),[37] Croatia (1992),[38] Czech Republic (1993),[39] Eritrea (1994),[40] Estonia (1992),[39] Georgia (1992),[41] Hungary (1982),[39] Kazakhstan (1992),[42] Kiribati (1986),[43] Kosovo (2009),[44] Kyrgyz Republic (1992),[45] Latvia (1992),[39] Lithuania (1992),[39] Macedonia (1992),[46] Marshall Islands (1992),[43] Micronesia (1993),[43] Moldova (1992),[47] Mongolia (1991),[48] Montenegro (2007),[49] Mozambique (1984),[50] Namibia (1990),[51] Palau (1997),[43] Poland (1986),[39] Russia (1992),[52] San Marino (1992),[53] Serbia (1992),[54] St. Kitts and Nevis (1984),[30] Tajikistan (1993),[55] Timor-Leste (2002),[56] Tonga (1985),[43] Turkmenistan (1992),[57] Tuvalu (2010–as Tuvalu joined after the 2009 special allocation, it may not have received XDRs),[43] Ukraine (1992),[58] Uzbekistan (1992),[59] and Yemen (1990).[60]
  2. ^ Relative compositions expressed in per cent are rounded.
  3. ^ A special allocation of XDRs became effective August 10, 2009 and was issued on September 9, 2009, to countries that joined the IMF after 1981 and so had never been allocated any.[3]
  4. ^ This allocation was made under the 2008 Quota and Voice Reforms to 54 countries with "dynamic economies" that were under-represented in the previous quota system. Date of allocation may vary from country to country, as allocation will occur "for those members that have consented to their increases once quota subscriptions are paid".[22]

References

Citations

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  81. ^ Financial Organization 2011, p. 106
  82. ^ 政府公共調達データベース: 政府公共調達概要 (in Japanese), 2009, retrieved June 18, 2011
  83. ^ "Annual Report 1986". Annual Report. International Monetary Fund: 68. 1986. ISSN 0250-7498.
  84. ^ "World Bank Successfully Prices Oversubscribed Landmark SDR Denominated Bond in China".
  85. ^ . International Maritime Organization. November 19, 1976. Archived from the original on June 11, 2011. Retrieved June 18, 2011.
  86. ^ CONVENTION FOR THE UNIFICATION OF CERTAIN RULES FOR INTERNATIONAL CARRIAGE BY AIR (AKA Montreal Convention) (PDF). United Nations. 1999. pp. 356–359. Retrieved June 18, 2011.
  87. ^ Annual report: 2000 : making the global economy work for all. International Monetary Fund. 2000. p. 75. ISBN 9781557759511.
  88. ^ Syria switches currency peg from dollar to XDR 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine bi-me.com, Tue June 5, 2007
  89. ^ "IMF Executive Board Concludes 2009 Article IV Consultation with the Syrian Arab Republic Public Information Notice (PIN) No. 10/42". Public Information Notices. IMF. March 25, 2010. Retrieved July 20, 2012.

Works cited

  • Strategy, Policy, and Review Department (January 7, 2011). Enhancing International Monetary Stability: A Role for the XDR? (PDF). International Monetary Fund. p. 1. Retrieved June 19, 2011. {{cite conference}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Financial Organization and Operations of the IMF: Pamphlet No. 45 (PDF) (6th ed.). International Monetary Fund. January 7, 2011.
  • Williamson, John (June 2009). (PDF). The Peterson Institute for International Economics. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-22. Retrieved 2010-07-04.

External links

  • Today's US dollar value of the XDR from the IMF
  • SDRs per Currency unit and Currency units per SDR last five days
  • XDR Interest Rate, Rate of Remuneration, Rate of Charge and Burden Sharing Adjustments 2009
  • XDR Interest Rate Calculation
  • Can IMF Currency Replace the Dollar?

special, drawing, rights, sdrs, code, supplementary, foreign, exchange, reserve, assets, defined, maintained, international, monetary, fund, sdrs, units, account, currency, they, represent, claim, currency, held, member, countries, which, they, exchanged, sdrs. Special drawing rights SDRs code XDR are supplementary foreign exchange reserve assets defined and maintained by the International Monetary Fund IMF 1 SDRs are units of account for the IMF and not a currency per se 2 They represent a claim to currency held by IMF member countries for which they may be exchanged 3 SDRs were created in 1969 to supplement a shortfall of preferred foreign exchange reserve assets namely gold and U S dollars 3 The ISO 4217 currency code for special drawing rights is XDR and the numeric code is 960 4 Special drawing rightsISO 4217CodeXDR numeric 960 UnitSymbolSDR DemographicsDate of introduction1969User s IMFValuationPegged withU S dollar euro Chinese yuan Japanese yen and pound sterlingSDRs are allocated by the IMF to countries 3 and cannot be held or used by private parties 5 The number of SDRs in existence was around XDR 21 4 billion in August 2009 During the global financial crisis of 2009 an additional XDR 182 6 billion was allocated to provide liquidity to the global economic system and supplement member countries official reserves By October 2014 the number of SDRs in existence was XDR 204 billion 6 Due to economic stress caused by the COVID 19 pandemic some economists and several finance ministers of poorer countries have called for a new allocation of 4T to support member economies as they seek ways to recover 7 In March 2021 the G24 and others proposed an allocation of 500B for this purpose 8 In response XDR 456 5 billion about US 650B was allocated on August 23 2021 9 The value of a SDR is based on a basket of key international currencies reviewed by IMF every five years 3 The weights assigned to the currencies in the XDR basket are adjusted to take into account their current prominence in terms of international trade and national foreign exchange reserves 3 Currently the XDR basket consists of the following five currencies U S dollar 43 38 euro 29 31 renminbi Chinese yuan 12 28 Japanese yen 7 59 British pound sterling 7 44 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Alternative to U S dollar 2 2 Use by developing countries 2 3 COVID 19 Pandemic 3 Value definition 3 1 Currency basket 3 2 Historical valuation 3 3 Daily valuation 4 Allocations 5 Exchange 6 Interest rate 7 Other uses 7 1 Unit of account 7 2 Use in international law 7 3 Use as currency 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Works cited 11 External linksName EditWhile the ISO 4217 currency code for special drawing rights is XDR 4 they are often referred to by their acronym SDR The name was chosen as a compromise between parties who wanted an international currency and those who wanted a credit facility 10 Member countries receiving XDR allocations were required by the reconstitution provision of the XDR articles to hold a prescribed number of XDRs If a state used any of its allotment it was expected to rebuild its XDR holdings As the reconstitution provisions were abrogated in 1981 the XDR now functions less like credit than previously 11 Countries are still expected to maintain their XDR holdings at a certain level but penalties for holding fewer than the allocated amount are now less onerous 3 The name may actually derive from an early proposal for IMF reserve drawing rights 12 The word reserve was later replaced with special because the idea that the IMF was creating a foreign exchange reserve asset was contentious 13 History EditSpecial drawing rights were created by the IMF in 1969 and were intended to be an asset held in foreign exchange reserves under the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates 3 After the collapse of that system in the early 1970s the XDR has taken on a less important role 14 Acting as the unit of account for the IMF has been its primary purpose 2 since 1972 15 The IMF itself calls the current role of the XDR insignificant 16 Developed countries who hold the greatest number of XDRs are unlikely to use them for any purpose 10 The only actual users of XDRs may be those developing countries that see them as a rather cheap line of credit 17 One reason XDRs may not see much use as foreign exchange reserve assets is that they must be exchanged into a currency before use 5 This is due in part to the fact private parties do not hold XDRs 5 they are only used and held by IMF member countries the IMF itself and a select few organizations licensed to do so by the IMF 18 Basic functions of foreign exchange reserves such as market intervention and liquidity provision as well as some less prosaic ones such as maintaining export competitiveness via favorable exchange rates cannot be accomplished directly using XDRs 19 This fact has led the IMF to label the XDR as an imperfect reserve asset 20 Another reason they may see little use is that the number of XDRs in existence is relatively few As of January 2011 XDRs represented less than 4 of global foreign exchange reserve assets 21 To function well a foreign exchange reserve asset must have sufficient liquidity but XDRs because of their small number may be perceived to be an illiquid asset The IMF says expanding the volume of official XDRs is a prerequisite for them to play a more meaningful role as a substitute reserve asset 21 Alternative to U S dollar Edit The XDR comes to prominence when the U S dollar is weak or otherwise unsuitable to be a foreign exchange reserve asset This usually manifests itself as an allocation of XDRs to IMF member countries Distrust of the U S dollar is not the only stated reason allocations have been made however One of its first roles was to alleviate an expected shortfall of U S dollars c 1970 15 At this time the United States had a conservative monetary policy 15 and did not want to increase the total amount of U S dollars in existence citation needed If the United States had continued down this path the dollar would have become a less attractive foreign exchange reserve asset it would not have had the necessary liquidity to serve this function Soon after XDR allocations began the United States reversed its former policy and provided sufficient liquidity 15 In the process a potential role for the XDR was removed During this first round of allocations 9 3 billion XDRs were distributed to IMF member countries The XDR resurfaced in 1978 when many countries were wary of taking on more foreign exchange reserve assets denominated in U S dollars This suspicion of the dollar precipitated an allocation of 12 billion XDRs over a period of four years 11 Concomitant with the financial crisis of 2007 08 the third round of XDR allocations occurred in the years 2009 3 and 2011 22 The IMF recognized the financial crisis as the cause for distributing the large majority of these third round allotments but some allocations were couched as distributing XDRs to countries that had never received any 3 and others as a re balancing of IMF quotas which determine how many XDRs a country is allotted to better represent the economic strength of emerging markets 22 During this time China a country with large holdings of U S dollar foreign exchange reserves 23 voiced its displeasure at the current international monetary system and promoted measures that would allow the XDR to fully satisfy the member countries demand for a reserve currency 24 These comments made by a chairman of the People s Bank of China Zhou Xiaochuan drew media attention 25 and the IMF showed some support for China s stance It produced a paper exploring ways the substance and function of the XDR could be increased 16 China has also suggested the creation of a substitution account to allow exchange of U S dollars into XDRs 10 When substitution was proposed before in 1978 the United States appeared reluctant to allow such a mechanism to become operational 11 Use by developing countries Edit In 2001 the UN suggested allocating XDRs to developing countries for use by them as cost free alternatives to building foreign exchange reserves through borrowing or running current account surpluses 26 In 2009 an XDR allocation was made to countries that had joined the IMF after the 1979 1981 round of allocations was complete and so had never been allocated any 3 First proposed in 1997 27 many of the beneficiaries of this 2009 allocation were developing countries a COVID 19 Pandemic Edit On August 23 2021 the IMF allocated 650 billion worth of XDRs to all 190 members of the IMF in proportion to member quotas in response to COVID 19 related balance of payments concerns This allocation of XDRs represents roughly 2 3rds of all XDRs currently in circulation and was by far the largest ever single allocation of XDRs 61 Value definition EditCurrency basket Edit To determine the composition of the XDR the IMF takes into account several currencies important to the world s trading and financial systems A currency s importance is currently measured by two factors the amount of exports sold in that currency and whether that currency is considered freely usable determined by its use as a foreign exchange reserve asset and how widely it is used in international transactions 3 An XDR basket definition remains valid for five years Approximately one to two months before the end of this time period the IMF Executive Board will re evaluate the XDR basket the currencies included as well as their weights can then change 62 Changing the XDR s value definition requires at least 70 of the votes among the IMF members 63 The changes take effect at the end of the five year period one to two months after the board review One business day before taking effect the newly defined weights are converted to currency amounts based on an average of the exchange rate over the past three months such that the value of the XDR in U S dollars remains the same before and after the change The currency amounts then remain fixed throughout the five year period 63 The IMF reserves the right to perform a re evaluation after less than five years if it decides that the current basket no longer reflects the relative importance of currencies in the world s trading and financial systems 3 it also reserves the right to postpone re evaluations If either occurs causing the old definition to be valid for less or more than five years the new definition will still be valid for a full five years Historical valuation Edit At the time of the XDR s creation in 1969 the United States dollar was backed by the gold standard and the XDR was fixed at 1 35 troy ounce of gold or exactly 1 US dollar 10 After the Nixon Shock of 1971 and during the collapse of the Bretton Woods system between 1971 and 1973 the XDR initially remained at 1 US dollar even as its value relative to gold dropped to 1 38 troy ounce in 1972 and 1 42 22 troy ounce in 1973 64 On July 1 1974 the XDR instead became defined by a currency basket of 16 currencies 15 On January 1 1981 the five year schedule was introduced and the XDR basket was reduced to five currencies the United States dollar the Deutsche mark the French franc the British pound and the Japanese yen 65 When the euro was introduced in January 1999 it replaced the German mark and French franc and the basket consisted of four currencies 3 In November 2010 the IMF determined that the Chinese yuan met the export requirement but failed to meet the freely usable requirement and thus was not included in the XDR basket taking effect on January 1 2011 In November 2015 the IMF announced that the Chinese yuan now met the freely usable requirement and would be included in the next basket definition changing its size back to five currencies The effective date of the re evaluation was postponed to October 1 2016 in order to allow users sufficient lead time to adjust 66 67 In March 2021 the IMF announced that the next re evaluation normally scheduled for October 1 2021 would be postponed to August 1 2022 in order to prevent the basket s definition from changing during the COVID 19 pandemic 68 Value of 1 XDR b Period XAU1969 1971 10 1 35 100 USD1971 1974 64 1 0 100 USD DEM GBP FRF ITL JPY CAD NLG BEF SAR ESP AUD SEK IRR NOK ATS1974 1980 69 0 4 32 6 0 32 10 2 0 05 9 7 0 42 7 1 52 0 6 6 21 0 6 0 0 07 5 9 0 14 4 3 1 6 3 5 0 13 3 0 1 5 2 1 0 017 2 1 0 11 2 1 1 7 2 0 0 1 1 5 0 28 1 3 USD DEM FRF JPY GBP1981 1985 64 0 54 42 0 46 19 0 74 13 34 0 13 0 071 13 1986 1990 64 0 452 42 0 527 19 1 02 12 33 4 15 0 0893 12 1991 1995 64 0 572 40 0 453 21 0 8 11 31 8 17 0 0812 11 1996 1998 64 0 582 39 0 446 21 0 813 11 27 2 18 0 105 11 USD EUR JPY GBP1999 2000 64 0 582 39 0 3519 32 70 27 2 18 0 105 11 2001 2005 64 0 577 44 0 426 31 21 0 14 0 0984 11 2006 2010 62 0 632 44 0 41 34 18 4 11 0 0903 11 2011 2016 62 0 68 41 9 0 423 37 4 12 1 9 4 0 111 11 3 USD EUR CNY JPY GBP2016 2022 71 0 58252 41 73 0 38671 30 93 1 0174 10 92 11 9 8 33 0 085946 8 09 2022 2027 72 0 57813 43 38 0 37379 29 31 1 0993 12 28 13 452 7 59 0 080870 7 44 Daily valuation Edit Because of fluctuating exchange rates the relative value of each currency varies continuously as does the value of the XDR The IMF sets the value of the XDR in terms of U S dollars every day The latest U S dollar valuation of the XDR is published on the IMF website 73 For example on January 31 2021 the value was US 1 44080 and on June 22 2021 the value was US 1 426480 74 Allocations EditMain article International Monetary Fund Voting power SDRs are allocated to member countries by the IMF A country s IMF quota the maximum amount of financial resources that it is obligated to contribute to the fund determines its allotment of XDRs 3 Any new allocations must be voted on in the XDR Department of the IMF and pass with an 85 majority 20 All IMF member countries are represented in the XDR Department 18 but this is not a one country one vote system voting power is determined by a member country s IMF quota 75 For example the United States has 16 7 of the vote as of March 2 2011 76 Allocations are not made on a regular basis and have only occurred on rare occasions The first round took place because of a situation that was soon reversed the possibility of an insufficient amount of U S dollars because of U S reluctance to run the deficit necessary to supply future demand Extraordinary circumstances have likewise led to the other XDR allocation events For example during the global financial crisis of 2009 XDR 182 6 billion was allocated to provide liquidity to the global economic system and supplement member countries official reserves The 2011 allocations were to low income member countries 22 Date Amount1970 1972 15 XDR 9 3 billion 3 1979 1981 3 XDR 12 1 billion 3 28 August 2009 3 XDR 161 2 billion 3 9 September 2009 c XDR 21 4 billion 3 Sometime after 3 March 2011 d XDR 20 8 billion 22 23 August 2021 3 XDR 456 5 billion 3 Exchange EditAn IMF member country that requires actual foreign currency may sell its SDRs to another member country in exchange for the currency To sell a part or all its SDRs the country must find a willing party to buy them 11 The IMF acts as an intermediary in this voluntary exchange The IMF also has the authority under the designation mechanism to ask member countries with strong foreign exchange reserves to purchase XDRs from those with weak reserves 3 The maximum obligation any country has under this mechanism is currently equal to twice the amount of its SDR allocation 19 As of 2015 XDRs may only be exchanged for euros Japanese yen UK pounds or US dollars 19 The IMF says exchanging XDRs can take several days 77 It is not however the IMF that pays out foreign currency in exchange for XDRs the claim to currency that XDRs represent is not a claim on the IMF 3 Interest rate EditThe IMF calculates a weekly interest rate which is based on a weighted average of representative interest rates on short term debt in the money markets of the XDR basket currencies No interest is payable on the SDRs allocated to a country by the IMF However interest is payable by an IMF member country that has exchanged sold some or all of the SDRs it was allocated and interest is paid to a member country that holds more SDRs than it was allocated i e the country that bought SDRs from another member 3 Other uses EditThe XDR is used in international transactions including export quotas in the IMF members and the number of official reserve assets which were in their own currencies It is traded on the main foreign exchange market including foreign exchange trading volume whether there are forward exchange markets 3 Unit of account Edit Some international organizations use the XDR as a unit of account 78 The IMF says using the XDR in this way help s cope with exchange rate volatility 20 As of 2001 organizations that use the XDR as a unit of account besides the IMF itself include Universal Postal Union 79 African Development Bank Arab Monetary Fund Asian Development Bank Bank for International Settlements 80 Common Fund for Commodities East African Development Bank Economic Community of West African States International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes International Fund for Agricultural Development and Islamic Development Bank 81 It is not only international organizations that use the XDR in this way JETRO uses XDRs to price foreign aid 82 In addition charges liabilities and fees prescribed by some international treaties are denominated in XDRs 83 In 2003 the Bank for International Settlements ceased to use the gold franc as their currency in favour of XDR Some bonds are also denominated in SDR like the IBRD 2016 SDR denominated bonds 84 Use in international law Edit In some international treaties and agreements XDRs are used to value penalties charges or prices For example the Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Claims caps personal liability for damages to ships at XDR 330 000 85 The Montreal Convention and other treaties also use XDRs in this way capping damages at XDR 128 821 86 Use as currency Edit According to the IMF the SDR may not be any country s optimal basket 80 but a few countries do peg their currencies to the XDR One possible benefit to nations with XDR pegs is that they may be perceived to be more transparent 80 As of 2000 the number of countries that did so was four 87 This is a substantial decrease from 1983 when 14 countries had XDR pegs 78 As of 2010 Syria pegs its pound to the XDR 88 89 See also EditBancor Reserve currency Group of Ten economics Central securities depositoryNotes Edit Countries that joined the IMF post 1981 include Albania 1991 28 Angola 1989 29 Antigua and Barbuda 1982 30 Armenia 1992 31 Azerbaijan 1992 32 Belarus 1992 33 Belize 1982 34 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1992 35 Brunei Darussalam 1995 36 Bulgaria 1990 37 Croatia 1992 38 Czech Republic 1993 39 Eritrea 1994 40 Estonia 1992 39 Georgia 1992 41 Hungary 1982 39 Kazakhstan 1992 42 Kiribati 1986 43 Kosovo 2009 44 Kyrgyz Republic 1992 45 Latvia 1992 39 Lithuania 1992 39 Macedonia 1992 46 Marshall Islands 1992 43 Micronesia 1993 43 Moldova 1992 47 Mongolia 1991 48 Montenegro 2007 49 Mozambique 1984 50 Namibia 1990 51 Palau 1997 43 Poland 1986 39 Russia 1992 52 San Marino 1992 53 Serbia 1992 54 St Kitts and Nevis 1984 30 Tajikistan 1993 55 Timor Leste 2002 56 Tonga 1985 43 Turkmenistan 1992 57 Tuvalu 2010 as Tuvalu joined after the 2009 special allocation it may not have received XDRs 43 Ukraine 1992 58 Uzbekistan 1992 59 and Yemen 1990 60 Relative compositions expressed in per cent are rounded A special allocation of XDRs became effective August 10 2009 and was issued on September 9 2009 to countries that joined the IMF after 1981 and so had never been allocated any 3 This allocation was made under the 2008 Quota and Voice Reforms to 54 countries with dynamic economies that were under represented in the previous quota system Date of allocation may vary from country to country as allocation will occur for those members that have consented to their increases once quota subscriptions are paid 22 References EditCitations Edit Special drawing right SDR factsheet www imf org International Monetary Fund Retrieved 30 October 2018 a b Williamson 2009 p 7 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Factsheet Special Drawing Rights SDRs IMF November 30 2015 Retrieved December 5 2015 a b Table A 1 E Currency and funds codes list SIX Interbank Clearing Ltd the ISO 4217 Maintenance Agency Archived from the original MS Excel file on 2015 09 11 Retrieved 2015 12 14 a b c Williamson 2009 p 5 Special Drawing Rights SDR imf org International Monetary Fund 2018 04 19 Retrieved 2018 12 24 Staff 11 April 2020 Special delivery Should the IMF dole out more special drawing rights The Economist website Retrieved 1 April 2021 Kevin P Gallagher Jose Antonio Ocampo and Ulrich Volz 26 March 2021 IMF Special Drawing Rights A key tool for attacking a COVID 19 financial fallout in developing countries Brookings Institution website Retrieved 1 April 2021 Special Drawing Rights SDR a b c d e Williamson 2009 p 1 a b c d Williamson 2009 p 3 Financial Organization 2011 p 92 Margaret Garritsen De Vries 1976 The International Monetary Fund 1966 1971 The System Under Stress Volume 2 International Monetary Fund p 154 ISBN 9780939934119 Fred Bergsten December 10 2007 How to solve the problem of the dollar Financial Times a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help a b c d e f Williamson 2009 p 2 a b Enhancing International Monetary Stability 2011 p 1 McKinnon Ronald Spring 2009 Reconsidering XDRs Harvard International Review p 7 retrieved June 19 2011 permanent dead link a b Annual report 2000 making the global economy work for all International Monetary Fund 2000 p 74 ISBN 9781557759511 a b c Enhancing International Monetary Stability 2011 p 7 a b c Enhancing International Monetary Stability 2011 p 4 a b Enhancing International Monetary Stability 2011 p 6 a b c d e The IMF s 2008 Quota and Voice Reforms Take Effect International Monetary Fund March 3 2011 Retrieved June 18 2011 Jamil Anderlini March 23 2009 China calls for new reserve currency Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Zhou Xiaochuan March 23 2009 Reform the International Monetary System People s Bank of China Archived from the original on September 22 2010 Alt URL China backs talks on dollar as reserve Reuters March 19 2009 China questions the dollar s role as a reserve currency The Economist March 26 2009 High Level Panel on Financing for Development Recommendations amp Technical Report PDF United Nations June 26 2001 pp 27 58 59 A 55 1000 Retrieved June 18 2011 IMF Executive Board Agrees XDR Allocation Proposal International Monetary Fund September 20 1997 Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Albania International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Angola International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 a b Eastern Caribbean Currency Union ECCU Imf International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Armenia International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 IMF Local Office in Azerbaijan International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Belarus International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Belize Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Bosnia and Herzegovina International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Brunei Darussalam Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Bulgaria International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Croatia Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help a b c d e f Regional Resident Representative Office for Central and Eastern Europe International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Eritrea Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Georgia International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Kazakhstan Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 a b c d e f Resident Representative Office in the Pacific Islands Imf International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 24 2011 Resident Representative Office in Kosovo International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Resident Representative Office in Kyrgyz Republic International Monetary Fund March 20 2009 Retrieved June 25 2011 Macedonia former Yugoslav Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Moldova Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Mongolia Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Montenegro Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Resident Representative Office in Mozambique International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Namibia Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Resident Representative Office in Russian Federation International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 San Marino Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Resident Representative Office in Serbia International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Resident Representative Office in Tajikistan International Monetary Fund January 2010 Retrieved June 25 2011 Timor Leste The Democratic Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Turkmenistan Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Resident Representative Office in Ukraine International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Uzbekistan Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 Yemen Republic of Financial Position in the Fund as of May 31 2011 International Monetary Fund Retrieved June 25 2011 2021 General SDR Allocation IMF Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b c IMF Determines New Currency Weights for SDR Valuation Basket IMF November 15 2010 Retrieved 2015 12 05 a b Review of the Method of Valuation of the SDR IMF Retrieved 2022 06 13 a b c d e f g h Antweiler Werner 2011 Special Drawing Rights The XDR Fact Sheet University of British Columbia Sauder School of Business Archived from the original on 2016 04 14 Retrieved 2011 06 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link OECD Reference Metadata Report Main Economic Indicators Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Retrieved 2015 03 07 IMF s Executive Board Completes Review of SDR Basket Includes Chinese Renminbi IMF November 30 2015 Retrieved December 5 2015 IMF Executive Board Completes the 2015 Review of SDR Valuation IMF December 1 2015 Retrieved December 5 2015 Review of The Method of Valuation of The SDR Proposed Extension of The Valuation Of The SDR Basket and Modification of The Date Of Effect of A New Basket IMF March 15 2021 Retrieved 2021 03 15 Pozo Susan May 1984 Composition and Variability of the SDR Review of Economics and Statistics 66 2 308 314 doi 10 2307 1925833 JSTOR 1925833 IMF Incorporates the euro into the XDR Valuation and Interest Rate Baskets Press release International Monetary Fund December 31 1998 Retrieved 2009 11 14 IMF Launches New SDR Basket Including Chinese Renminbi Determines New Currency Amounts IMF September 30 2016 Retrieved 2016 10 01 Press Release IMF Determines New Currency Amounts for the SDR Valuation Basket XDR Valuation updated daily International Monetary Fund QUARTERLY REPORT ON IMF FINANCES For the Quarter Ended January 31 2021 31 January 2021 IMF website p 22 Retrieved 22 June 2021 Factsheet IMF Quotas International Monetary Fund March 3 2011 Retrieved June 24 2011 Quota and Voting Shares Before and After Implementation of Reforms Agreed in 2008 and 2010 In percentage shares of total IMF quota PDF International Monetary Fund 2011 Retrieved June 24 2011 Enhancing International Monetary Stability 2011 p 10 a b Annual Report 1984 International Monetary Fund 1984 p 88 international monetary fund 1984 UPU Letter Post Final Protocol 2013 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 05 16 Retrieved 2018 05 15 a b c Enhancing International Monetary Stability 2011 p 14 Financial Organization 2011 p 106 政府公共調達データベース 政府公共調達概要 in Japanese 2009 retrieved June 18 2011 Annual Report 1986 Annual Report International Monetary Fund 68 1986 ISSN 0250 7498 World Bank Successfully Prices Oversubscribed Landmark SDR Denominated Bond in China Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Claims LLMC International Maritime Organization November 19 1976 Archived from the original on June 11 2011 Retrieved June 18 2011 CONVENTION FOR THE UNIFICATION OF CERTAIN RULES FOR INTERNATIONAL CARRIAGE BY AIR AKA Montreal Convention PDF United Nations 1999 pp 356 359 Retrieved June 18 2011 Annual report 2000 making the global economy work for all International Monetary Fund 2000 p 75 ISBN 9781557759511 Syria switches currency peg from dollar to XDR Archived 2011 07 07 at the Wayback Machine bi me com Tue June 5 2007 IMF Executive Board Concludes 2009 Article IV Consultation with the Syrian Arab Republic Public Information Notice PIN No 10 42 Public Information Notices IMF March 25 2010 Retrieved July 20 2012 Works cited Edit Strategy Policy and Review Department January 7 2011 Enhancing International Monetary Stability A Role for the XDR PDF International Monetary Fund p 1 Retrieved June 19 2011 a href Template Cite conference html title Template Cite conference cite conference a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Financial Organization and Operations of the IMF Pamphlet No 45 PDF 6th ed International Monetary Fund January 7 2011 Williamson John June 2009 Policy Brief Drawing Rights PDF The Peterson Institute for International Economics Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 22 Retrieved 2010 07 04 External links EditToday s US dollar value of the XDR from the IMF SDRs per Currency unit and Currency units per SDR last five days XDR Interest Rate Rate of Remuneration Rate of Charge and Burden Sharing Adjustments 2009 XDR Interest Rate Calculation Can IMF Currency Replace the Dollar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Special drawing rights amp oldid 1137913445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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