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This paper explores the role of central banks in foreign exchange settlements, highlighting the need for liquidity provision and essential payment mechanisms. It delves into modeling payments systems and the importance of fundamental assumptions.
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Discussion of Institutions of Foreign Exchange Settlement in a Two-Country Model David C. Mills, Jr. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System david.c.mills@frb.gov Disclaimer: Views of author not necessarily views of Federal Reserve Board or System
Freeman (AER 1996) • Formulates role for central bank lending • Key ingredients • Money used to purchase goods and repay debt • Liquidity problem rationalizes central bank discount window
Fujiki (JME 2003) • Adds foreign exchange market with liquidity need • Old creditors with taste shock must exchange currencies • Only subsets (of different measure) from each country arrive early to foreign exchange market • Different exchange rates contingent on arrival to foreign exchange market
Fujiki (JME 2003) • Solution: • One of central banks provides liquidity for early foreign exchange • Liquidity provision restricted by gold standard at optimal exchange rate
Today’s Paper • Implicitly asks if such a policy is essential • Answer: no • Private payment-versus-payment system with central bank liquidity provision • Private Eurodollar accounts • Currency union only under special case
Essentiality • Definition of essential payment mechanism • Why essentiality test is important • Approach to modeling payments systems: focus on fundamentals
Essentiality: A Definition • Achieves desirable outcomes that cannot be achieved by any other payment mechanism • Example of desirable outcomes: public policy objectives • Fed: safety, efficiency, accessibility • Desirable outcomes strike right balance • Today’s paper • Focus on efficiency
Why an Essentiality Test? • Strong case must be made for central bank involvement • Careful evaluation of private sector solutions • Example: Monetary Control Act of 1980 • Federal Reserve must compete with private sector in provision of payment services • Must review whether provision of some services are essential
Why an Essentiality Test? • Determines degree of involvement • Catalyst • Regulation and oversight • Direct provision of payment services • Weigh adequacy of tools that favor less involvement with those that favor more
Essentiality Test in Today’s Paper • Equivalent • Central bank liquidity provision under a gold standard • Private payment-versus-payment system with central bank liquidity • Private Eurodollar accounts • Question: How robust is this equivalence?
Modeling Payments: Fundamentals • Policy-maker criticism: models seem highly stylized • Risk that conclusions not taken seriously • Solution: focus on relevant fundamentals
Lessons from Monetary Theory • Some necessary conditions for money to be essential as means of payment • Imperfect memory about trading histories • Imperfect commitment to (enforcement of) future actions • Recast language of islands, hills and tunnels into language of information, commitment and enforcement • Example: Mills (RED 2004) • Recast Freeman (AER 1996) • Assumptions about enforcement can raise doubts about essentiality of payment mechanism with need for liquidity
Conjecture about Today’s Paper • Strong assumptions about commitment of guardians are driving results • Example: Eurodollar accounts • Commitment to negotiable CDs • Commitment to gold standard • Commitment to cooperate • Central bank liquidity provision under gold standard seems to require less commitment
Conclusion • Essentiality test is important line of research in theoretical models of payments • Explicit assumptions regarding fundamentals (such as information, commitment, enforcement) add to economist understanding and aid policy-makers