Since the mid-1990s, monetary authorities in most large developed countries have backed away from foreign-exchange intervention—buying and selling foreign currencies to influence exchange rates. Switzerland's recent experience goes a long way to illustrate why: Foreign-exchange intervention did not afford the Swiss National Bank with a means of systematically affecting the franc independent of Swiss monetary policy, and it left the Bank exposed to foreign-exchange losses. To affect exchange rates, central banks must change their monetary policies.
CITATION STYLE
Humpage, O. F. (2013). The Limitations of Foreign-Exchange Intervention: Lessons from Switzerland. Economic Commentary (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.26509/frbc-ec-201313
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