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A linked exchange rate system is a type of exchange rate regime that pegs the exchange rate of one currency to another. It is the exchange rate system implemented in Hong Kong to stabilise the exchange rate between the Hong Kong dollar (HKD) and the United States dollar (USD). The Macao pataca (MOP) is similarly linked to the Hong Kong dollar.
By this arrangement the HKMA guarantees to exchange United States dollar into Hong Kong dollars and vice versa, at the rate of 7.80. When the market rate is below 7.80, the banks will convert United States dollar for Hong Kong dollars from the HKMA, Hong Kong dollars supply will increase, and the market rate will climb back to 7.80.
3.4 Hong Kong dollar as exchange rate anchor. 4 Conventional peg. Toggle Conventional peg subsection. ... US dollar as exchange rate anchor
This is a list of circulating fixed exchange rate currencies, ... Hong Kong dollar: U.S. dollar: 7.75-7.85 [2] Jersey pound: Pound sterling: 1 Jordanian dinar:
Economy of Hong Kong Central and Victoria Harbour of Hong Kong Currency Hong Kong dollar (HKD) Fiscal year 1 April – 31 March Trade organisations APEC, WTO, Group of Twenty (Chinese delegation), One Belt One Road, AIIB and ICC etc. Country group Developed/Advanced High-income economy Statistics Population 7,498,100 (2023) GDP $401.751 billion (nominal, 2024) $569.828 billion (PPP, 2024) GDP ...
The exchange rate between the Hong Kong dollar and the United States dollar has also been linked since 1983 at HK$7.8/USD, and pataca of Macau, pegged to Hong Kong dollar at MOP1.03/HKD, indirectly linked to the US dollar at roughly MOP 8/USD.
The issue of banknotes of the Hong Kong ... the Government Exchange Fund in US dollars, at a specified rate of US$1 to HK$7.80 under the Linked Exchange Rate system. ...
Black Saturday, 24 September 1983, is the name given to the crisis when the Hong Kong dollar exchange rate versus the United States dollar was at an all-time low. On that day, US$1 exchanged for HK$9.6. [1] For a period, Hong Kong stores began quoting products in US dollar prices, because of the uncertain fluctuation in domestic currency.