Controlling Currency Mismatches in Emerging Markets

Couverture
Institute for International Economics, 2004 - 164 pages
In most of the currency crises of the 1990s, the largest output falls have occurred in those emerging economies with large currency mismatches, a phenomenon that occurs when assets and liabilities are denominated in different currencies such that net worth is sensitive to changes in the exchange rate. Currency mismatching makes crisis management much more difficult since it constrains the willingness of the monetary authority to reduce interest rates in a recession (for fear of initiating a large fall in the currency that would bring with it large-scale insolvencies). The mismatching also produces a "fear of floating" on the part of emerging economies, sometimes inducing them to make currency-regime choices that are not in their own long-term interest. Morris Goldstein and Philip Turner summarize what is known about the origins of currency mismatching in emerging economies, discuss how best to define and measure currency mismatching, and review policy options for reducing the size of the problem.

À propos de l'auteur (2004)

Morris Goldstein held several senior staff positions at the International Monetary Fund (1970-94), including Deputy Director of its Research Department (198794). He has written extensively on international economic policy and on international capital markets. He is the author of The Asian Financial Crisis: Causes, Cures, and Systemic Implications (1998), The Case for an International Banking Standard (1997), coauthor of Assessing Financial Vulnerability: An Early Warning System for Emerging Markets with Graciela Kaminsky and Carmen Reinhart (2000), coeditor of Private Capital Flows to Emerging Markets after the Mexican Crisis (1996), The Exchange Rate System and the IMF: A Modest Agenda (1995), and project director for Safeguarding Prosperity in a Global Financial System: The Future International Financial Architecture (1999) for the Council on Foreign Relations Task Force on the International Financial Architecture.

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