VoxEU Column Exchange Rates

UAE & Other Gulf Countries Urged to Switch Currency Peg from the Dollar to a Basket That Includes Oil

The Gulf States’ dollar peg is causing them harm. One of the world’s leading international macroeconomists argues that they should “peg the export price” as this delivers automatic accommodation to terms of trade shocks while retaining the credibility-enhancing advantages of a nominal anchor.

The possibility that some Gulf States, particularly the UAE, might abandon their long-time pegs to the dollar is getting increasing attention.1 It makes sense. The combination of high oil prices, rapid growth, a tightly fixed exchange rate, and the big depreciation of the dollar against other currencies (especially the euro, important for Gulf imports) was always going to be a recipe for strong money inflows and inflation in these countries.

The economic dynamism -- most striking in Dubai -- is admirable and fascinating, but also now clearly indicative of overheating. Indeed inflation, as predicted, has risen alarmingly. Among other ill effects, it is producing unrest among immigrant workers. An appreciation of the dirham and riyal is the obvious solution.

Most often discussed as an alternative to the dollar peg is a peg to a basket of major currencies. This would be an improvement. Kuwait, for example, made this switch a couple of years ago.

But a basket peg does not address the fact that when oil prices rise generally (not just against the dollar), as in recent years, monetary policy is constrained to be looser than it should be. Similarly, when oil prices fall generally (not just against the dollar), as in the 1990s, monetary policy is constrained to be tighter than it should be.

Floating exchange rate: shortcomings

A floating exchange rate would be the traditional alternative, on the theory that the currency would then automatically appreciate when oil prices rise and depreciate when they fall. But there are serious disadvantages to small open countries floating, such as the loss of a nominal anchor for monetary policy. Today’s reigning orthodoxy is to add an inflation target as the new nominal anchor. But this doesn’t solve the problem if the price index is the CPI, which gives little weight to oil, the biggest sector in production and exports.

I believe that a better solution would be to include the price of oil in the basket of currencies to which the Gulf currencies would peg. I have laid out the case elsewhere.2 (I call it PEP, for Peg the Export Price.) I was pleased to see recently that the FT mentioned this option approvingly (“Dollar-pegged Out,” July 7):

“The Gulf needs to peg to something. A first step (after revaluation) would be to peg to a basket of currencies that included the euro and the yen. A bolder step would be to include the price of oil in that basket, so that currencies would appreciate when oil is strong, and depreciate when it is weak.”



1 For instance, see Marty Feldstein in the FT, Brad Setser on the CFR blog,

2 See web page for these examples: Frankel, J. (2005). “Peg the Export Price Index: A Proposed Monetary Regime for Small Countries,” in Journal of Policy Modeling, Dominick Salvatore, ed., June 2005; A Proposal to Tie Iraq’s Currency to Oil published as "A Crude Peg for the Iraqi Dinar," Financial Times, June 13, 2003; "A Proposed Monetary Regime for Small Commodity-Exporters: Peg the Export Price (‘PEP’),"   International Finance (Blackwill Publishers), vol. 6, no. 1, Spring 2003, 61-88. KSG Research Working Paper No. RWP03-003, Harvard University; "Should Gold-Exporters Peg Their Currencies to Gold?", Research Study No. 29 for the World Gold Council, London, November, 2002; "A Proposal to Anchor Monetary Policy by the Price of the Export Commodity" (with Ayako Saiki), in Journal of Economic Integration, September 2002, Vol. 17, No. 3, 417-448.

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