Currency System
Currency System
Currency System
Chapter:
Global Finance and
Business
Currency System
Gold Currency
Monetary Currency
Convertible Currency
Unconvertible Currency
Hard Currency
International Currency Exchange
Exchange Rate
Gold Standard System.
Bretton Wood System/Fixed Exchanged Rate
Free Floating System
Managed Floating System
Hyperinflation
Currency System
Nearly every state prints its own money. The
ability to print one’s own currency is one of the
hallmarks of state sovereignty. yet is a globalized
system of trade and finance, business and
individuals often need other states’ currencies to
do business.
Gold Currency
No world currency
Sovereign states
Europe
World Currency
Political Instability-Future Value
Monetary Currency
Gold Standard System Vs International Monetary System
Irrespective of gold and silver
Makes international economies more efficient
Today’s Currency System
This Currency is of two types of Currencies,
summed up in the next slide
Hard Currency
“In contrast with nonconvertible currency, hard currency is money that
can be readily converted to leading world currencies” (Joshua.p.312)
Examples of China and Two Version of Currency in Cuba
States maintain reserves of hard currency
These reserves are the equivalent of the stockpiles of gold in
centuries past.
National currencies are now backed by hard currencies reserves, not
gold.
Soft Currency
Soft currencies are usually from countries that
are not too stable (politically and economically) nor
come in the category of "superpowers".
Investments and trade in such currencies is a high
risk. But investors willing to earn more over short-
term can definitely go for such currencies, at their
own risk.
Two Types of Hard and
Soft Currencies
Lets-Visit Next Slide
Convertible Currency
“The guarantee that the holder of
a particular currency can
exchange it for another currency”.
(Joshua.p.311)
Benefits of Convertible Currency