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Special drawing rights (XDR - aka: SDR) are supplementary foreign exchange reserve assets defined and maintained by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The XDR is not a currency per se. It instead represents a claim to currency held by IMF member countries for which they may be exchanged.[1] As they can only be exchanged for Euro, Japanese yen, pounds sterling, or U.S. dollars,[2] XDRs may actually represent a potential claim on IMF member countries' nongold foreign exchange reserves, which are usually held in those currencies. While they may appear to have a far more important part to play or, perhaps, an important future role, being the unit of account for the IMF has long been the main function of the XDR.[3]
Created in 1969 to supplement a shortfall of preferred foreign exchange reserve assets, namely [4]
XDRs are allocated to countries by the IMF.[1] Private parties do not hold or use them.[5] As of March 2011, the amount of XDRs in existence is around XDR 238.3 billion, but this figure was expected to rise to XDR 476.8 billion by 2013.[6]
While the [4] they are often referred to by their acronym: SDR, both of which refer to the name "Special Drawing Rights"—intentionally innocuous and free of connotations due to disagreements over the nature of this new reserve asset during its creation.
Some wanted it to function like money and others, credit.[7] While the name would offend neither side of this debate, it can be argued that prior to 1981 the XDR was a debt security and so a form of credit. Member countries receiving XDR allocations were required by the reconstitution provision of the XDR articles to hold a prescribed number of XDRs. If a state used any of its allotment, it was expected to rebuild its XDR holdings. As the reconstitution provisions were abrogated in 1981, the XDR now functions less like credit than previously.[8] Countries are still expected to maintain their XDR holdings at a certain level, but penalties for holding fewer than the allocated amount are now less onerous.[1]
The name may actually derive from an early proposal for IMF "reserve drawing rights".[9] The word "reserve" was later replaced with "special" because the idea that the IMF was creating a foreign exchange reserve asset was contentious.[10]
Special drawing rights were created by the IMF in 1969 and were intended to be an asset held in foreign exchange reserves under the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates.[1] 1 XDR was initially defined as 1 USD, equal to 0.888671 g of gold. After the collapse of that system in the early 1970s the XDR has taken on a far less important role.[11] Acting as the unit of account for the IMF has been its primary purpose[3] since 1972.[12]
The IMF itself calls the current role of the XDR "insignificant".[13] Developed countries, who hold the greatest number of XDRs, are unlikely to use them for any purpose.[7] The only actual users of XDRs may be those developing countries that see them as "a rather cheap line of credit".[14]
One reason XDRs may not see much use as foreign exchange reserve assets is that they must be exchanged into a currency before use.[5] This is due in part to the fact private parties do not hold XDRs:[5] they are only used and held by IMF member countries, the IMF itself, and a select few organizations licensed to do so by the IMF.[15] Basic functions of foreign exchange reserves, such as market intervention and liquidity provision, as well as some less prosaic ones, such as maintaining export competitiveness via favorable exchange rates, cannot be accomplished directly using XDRs.[2] This fact has led the IMF to label the XDR as an "imperfect reserve asset".[16]
Another reason they may see little use is that the number of XDRs in existence is relatively few. As of January 2011, XDRs represented less than 4% of global foreign exchange reserve assets.[17] To function well a foreign exchange reserve asset must have sufficient liquidity, but XDRs, due to their small number, may be perceived to be an illiquid asset. The IMF says, "expanding the volume of official SDRs is a prerequisite for them to play a more meaningful role as a substitute reserve asset".[17]
The XDR comes to prominence when the U.S. dollar is weak or otherwise unsuitable to be a foreign exchange reserve asset. This usually manifests itself as an allocation of XDRs to IMF member countries. Distrust of the U.S. dollar is not the only stated reason allocations have been made, however.
One of its first roles was to alleviate an expected shortfall of U.S. dollars c. 1970.[12] At this time, the United States had a conservative monetary policy[12] and did not want to increase the total amount of U.S. dollars in existence. If the United States had continued down this path, the dollar would have become a less attractive foreign exchange reserve asset: it would not have had the necessary liquidity to serve this function. Soon after XDR allocations began, the United States reversed its former policy and provided sufficient liquidity.[12] In the process a potential role for the XDR was removed. During this first round of allocations, 9.3 billion XDRs were distributed to IMF member countries.
The XDR resurfaced in 1978 when many countries were wary of taking on more foreign exchange reserve assets denominated in U.S. dollars. This suspicion of the dollar precipitated an allocation of 12 billion XDRs over a period of four years.[8]
Concomitant with the financial crisis of 2007–2010, the third round of XDR allocations occurred in the years 2009[1] and 2011.[18] The IMF recognized the financial crisis as the cause for distributing the large majority of these third-round allotments, but some allocations were couched as distributing XDRs to countries that had never received any[1] and others as a re-balancing of IMF quotas, which determine how many XDRs a country is allotted, to better represent the economic strength of emerging markets.[18] In total, 203.4 billion XDRs were allocated in this round.
During this time China, a country with large holdings of US dollar foreign exchange reserves,[19] voiced its displeasure at the current international monetary system promoting measures that would allow the SDR to "fully satisfy the member countries' demand for a reserve currency".[20] These comments, made by a chairman of the People's Bank of China, Zhou Xiaochuan, drew media attention,[21] and the IMF showed some support for China's stance. It produced a paper exploring ways the substance and function of the XDR could be increased.[13] China has also suggested the creation of a substitution account to allow exchange of U.S. dollars into XDRs.[7] When substitution was proposed before, in 1978, the United States appeared reluctant to allow such a mechanism to become operational.[8] It is likely just as reluctant today.
In 2001, the UN suggested allocating XDRs to developing countries for use by them as cost-free alternatives to building foreign exchange reserves though borrowing or running current account surpluses.[22] In 2009, a SDR allocation was made to countries that had joined the IMF after the 1979–1981 round of allocations was complete (and so had never been allocated any).[1] First proposed in 1997,[23] many of the beneficiaries of this 2009 allocation were developing countries.[1]
The value of the XDR is determined by the value of several currencies important to the world’s trading and financial systems.[1] Initially its value was fixed, so that 1 XDR = 1 U.S. dollar,[7] but this was abandoned in favor of a currency basket after the 1973 collapse of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates.[12] From July 1974 to December 1980, the XDR consisted of a basket of 16 currencies. From January 1981 until the birth of the euro, the basket was updated to include U.S. dollar, the Deutsche mark, the French franc, the British pound and the Japanese yen as the constituents.[57] Composed of the U.S. dollar, the euro, the British pound and the Japanese yen,[1] the current basket of currencies used to value the XDR is "weighted" meaning that the more important currencies have a larger impact on its value. As of December 2010, the value of one XDR is equal to the sum of 0.423 Euro, 12.1 yen, 0.111 pounds, and 0.66 U.S. dollars.[58]
This basket is re-evaluated every five years, and the currencies included as well as the weights given to them can then change. A currency's importance is currently measured by the degree to which it is used as a foreign exchange reserve asset and the amount of exports sold in that currency.[1]
Due to fluctuating exchange rates, the relative value of each currency varies continuously and so does the value of the XDR. The IMF fixes the value of one XDR in terms of U.S. dollars every day. The latest U.S. dollar valuation of the XDR is published on the IMF website.[59]
Highest value occurred on 18 March 2008: 1.65109 SDR/USD
Lowest value occurred on 2 December 2005: 1.41908 SDR/USD
Special drawing rights carry a weekly determined interest rate, but no party pays interest if an IMF member country maintains the amount of SDRs allocated to it. Based on "a weighted average of representative interest rates on short-term debt in the money markets of the SDR basket currencies", interest is paid by an IMF member country if it holds less SDRs than it was allocated, and interest is paid to a member country if it holds more SDRs than the amount it was allocated.[1]
Special drawing rights are allocated to member countries by the IMF. A country's IMF quota, the maximum amount of financial resources that it is obligated to contribute to the fund, determines its allotment of XDRs.[1] Any new allocations must be voted on in the SDR Department of the IMF and pass with an 85% majority.[16] All IMF member countries are represented in the SDR Department,[15] but this is not a one country, one vote system; voting power is determined by a member country's IMF quota.[62] For example, the United States has 16.7% of the vote as of March 2, 2011.[63]
Allocations are not made on a regular basis and have only occurred on several occasions. The first round took place due to a situation that was soon reversed, the possibility of an insufficient amount of U.S. dollars because of U.S. reluctance to run the deficit necessary to supply future demand. Extraordinary circumstances have, likewise, led to the other XDR allocation events.
In order to use its XDRs, a country must find a willing party to buy them.[8] The IMF acts as an intermediary in this voluntary exchange; it also has the authority under the designation mechanism to ask member countries with strong foreign exchange reserves to purchase SDRs from those with weak reserves.[1] The maximum obligation any country has under this mechanism is currency equal to twice the amount of its SDR allocation.[2] As of 2011, SDRs may only be exchanged for Euro, Japanese yen, UK pounds, or U.S. dollars.[2] The IMF says exchanging SDRs can take "several days".[64]
It is not, however, the IMF that pays out foreign currency in exchange for SDRs: the claim to currency that SDRs represent is not a claim on the IMF.[1]
Some international organizations use the XDR as a JETRO uses SDRs to price foreign aid.[68] In addition, charges, liabilities, and fees prescribed by some international treaties are denominated in SDRs.[69] In 2003 Bank for International Settlements ceased to use the gold franc as their currency, in favour of SDR.
In some international treaties and agreements, XDRs are used to value penalties, charges or prices. For example, the Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Claims caps personal liability for damages to ships at XDR 330,000.[70] The Montreal Convention and other treaties also use SDRs in this way.[71]
According to the IMF, "the SDR may not be any country’s optimal basket",[66] but a few countries do peg their currencies to the SDR. One possible benefit to nations with SDR pegs is that they may be perceived to be more transparent.[66] As of 2000, the number of countries that did so was four.[72] This is a substantial decrease from 1983, when 14 countries had SDR pegs.[65] As of 2007[73] and 2010,[74] Syria pegs its pound to the SDR.
Isle of Man, India, Canada, European Union, British Overseas Territories
Copper, Japan, World War II, Bank of Japan, Economy of Japan
United Kingdom, Canada, Sweden, European Union, Australia
New York City, United States, American Civil War, Hawaii, Western United States
South Korea, Tokyo, Hokkaido, Australia, China