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Exchange rate
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==Exchange rate regime== {{Main|Exchange rate regime}} Countries are free to choose which type of exchange rate regime they will apply to their currency. The main types of exchange rate regimes are: free-floating, pegged (fixed), or a hybrid. In free-floating regimes, exchange rates are allowed to vary against each other according to the market forces of supply and demand. Exchange rates for such currencies are likely to change almost constantly as quoted on [[financial market]]s, mainly by [[bank]]s, around the world. A movable or adjustable peg system is a system of [[fixed exchange rate]]s, but with a provision for the revaluation (usually devaluation) of a currency. For example, between 1994 and 2005, the [[List of renminbi exchange rates|Chinese yuan renminbi]] (RMB) was pegged to the [[United States dollar]] at RMB 8.2768 to $1. China was not the only country to do this; from the end of [[World War II]] until 1967, Western European countries all maintained fixed exchange rates with the US dollar based on the [[Bretton Woods system]].<ref>{{cite web|url=//www-econ.stanford.edu/faculty/workp/swp99020.pdf#search=%22western+europe+fixed+exchange+rate+1970+us+dollar%22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060824052857/http://www-econ.stanford.edu/faculty/workp/swp99020.pdf|title=Euroland and East Asia in a Dollar-Based International Monetary System: Mundell Revisited|first1=Ronald I.|last1=McKinnon|archive-date=24 August 2006|date=9 August 1999}}</ref> But that system had to be abandoned in favor of floating, market-based regimes due to market pressures and speculation, according to President Richard M. Nixon in a speech on August 15, 1971, in what is known as the [[Nixon Shock]]. Still, some governments strive to keep their currency within a narrow range. As a result, currencies become over-valued or under-valued, leading to excessive trade deficits or surpluses.
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