Browse Economics

Nominal, Real, and Effective Exchange Rates

Foreign-exchange economics terms for nominal, real, effective, and real effective exchange rates.

Nominal, Real, and Effective Exchange Rates explains exchange-rate measures, real and nominal currency values, currency regimes, pegs, floats, convertibility, devaluation, monetary standards, and capital controls used in finance.

Use these pages when currency movements, exchange-rate measurement, cross-border cash flows, country risk, or balance-of-payments pressure affects a finance decision. It sits inside Exchange-Rate Measures and Real Rates, so readers can move up when the broader economics context matters.

This landing page points readers toward Bilateral and Effective Exchange Rates, and Nominal and Real Exchange Rates. Choose the narrower page when the term changes the evidence source, calculation, institution, market convention, risk exposure, or decision being made.

What This Branch Covers

AreaUse it for
Bilateral and Effective Exchange RatesBilateral and trade-weighted exchange-rate measures used in macro, trade, and currency analysis.
Nominal and Real Exchange RatesCore exchange-rate measures comparing quoted currency prices with inflation-adjusted purchasing power.

What to Check

  • Currency pair or currency basket.
  • Nominal, real, effective, fixed, floating, or controlled measure.
  • Base period, inflation index, or weighting method.
  • Central-bank, capital-control, or convertibility rule.
  • Cash-flow, valuation, hedge, or country-risk exposure affected.

Common Mistakes

  • Comparing nominal and real exchange rates as if they were the same measure.
  • Assuming a peg is risk-free or permanent.
  • Ignoring controls, settlement limits, and convertibility restrictions.
  • Reading a currency label without checking which country, market, or basket defines it.

Currency explanations are educational and do not recommend a trade, hedge, transfer, or country allocation.

In this section

Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026