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According to the ‘impossible trinity’ of monetary policy, a country can pick only two of the following three at the same time:
a flexible foreign exchange rate, free capital movement and an independent monetary policy
a fixed foreign exchange rate, free capital movement and an independent monetary policy
a flexible foreign exchange rate, free current account convertibility and an independent monetary policy
a fixed foreign exchange rate, free current account convertibility and an independent monetary policy
As per the theory of the “impossible trinity" or the “trilemma" of monetary policy given by Fleming and Mundell, a country can pick only two of the following three at the same time: a fixed foreign exchange rate, free capital movement (as in, no capital controls), and an independent monetary policy that controls the money supply, mainly through interest rate regimes. Hence option b is correct.
By: Abhishek Sharma ProfileResourcesReport error
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