Freely floating exchange rate system
Freely floating exchange rate system
Floating Exchange Rate System
The practice in which a
central bank buys and
sells one or more
foreign currencies in order to affect the
exchange rate of its own
currency. To give a very simple example, if a central bank believes its own currency is
overvalued, it may buy other currencies on the
open market to increase
demand and therefore the price of these currencies. The extra demand will likely drive down the exchange rate of its own currency to a lower level.
Farlex Financial Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All Rights Reserved
References in periodicals archive
The central bank has a
freely floating exchange rate system and that the depreciation is largely driven by fundamentals.
The BSP official noted that the central bank continued to adhere to a
freely floating exchange rate system.
He added that as a
freely floating exchange rate system, the depreciation of the peso in the past two years is "largely and in the long run" driven by fundamentals which they continue to see.
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