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Please read my question in the following context.
USD to Indian Rs (INR) exchange rate is approx 1:44 however as per the PPP (Purchasing Power Parity) the real rate is 1:10. This is controleed by Indian govt. However they are working on a 5 year plan to make the Indian currency fully convertible. Does that mean the exchange rate would move towards the real raito ? It might be useful to keep in ming the high projected economy growth rate and the opening up of economy by Indian government. India is opening up its retail and other service industries, which the big investors are eagerly waiting for a long time. Retail alone is expected to be bigger than IT. NYSE has already bought 5% stake in Indian National Stock Exchange and 60 billion dollars is waiting to enter the Indian financial market (mutual funds).
Befor ending my this posting, I would really like to thank you for all your time and help to answer my question.

2007-01-30 03:39:47 · 2 answers · asked by sam k 2 in Social Science Economics

2 answers

In reality there are no fixed currencies. In reality a currency does not maintain some magical value just because the government decrees it -- not if that country is engaged in trade with the rest of the world.

To maintain a "fixed" exchange rate, what happens is that that country's central bank must buy or sell its own currency in order to manipulate its value on the exchange markets -- that's how the price is "fixed". This can be an expensive exercise, especially when the currency is naturally tending to lose value, and the country must blow out its reserves of foreign hard currencies to prop up its own currency. (eg, India recklessly uses US dollars to buy Rupees, in order to create artificial demand for the Rupee, and prop up its price to stay at the pegged value.)

Eventually countries decide it's not worth the expense of manipulating the currency (or they go broke in the effort and run out of hard currency to work with), and just decide to let it trade freely the way God intended.

2007-01-30 08:03:32 · answer #1 · answered by KevinStud99 6 · 0 0

not if the counties have a trouble-free banking coverage such through fact the Euro Zone in the past they converted to the Euro despite if it did while the united kingdom tried it yet without following a fixed path (it tried to bracket the value yet set it too severe) then did not shop on with EuroZone financial corporation rules. Flexi substitute quotes make currencies open to exploitation and manipulation by investors as safeguard a forex so as that ITS needed could reason and fiscal equipment to interrupt down and set off inflation and so on. the smaller currencies could link together in there very own euro zone equivalent then enable those vast groupings pick the flow freely then the threat of dealer manipulation of currencies would be decreased

2016-10-16 07:25:57 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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