The New Drivers of Fear of Floating: Evidence from Latin America

Q3 Economics, Econometrics and Finance Journal of Globalization and Development Pub Date : 2019-06-01 DOI:10.1515/jgd-2017-0012
Jonathan Malagón, Camila Orbegozo
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Abstract

Abstract There exists a consensus in the literature that during the 90s the main reason for fear of floating in emerging economies was the excessive liabilities dollarization, both in private and public sectors, which resulted in central banks’ interventions over the exchange rate. The main objective of these interventions was preventing the negative balance sheet effects originated by currency depreciations. Latin America certainly fits in this description, as convincingly documented by Calvo and Reinhart (Calvo, Guillermo A., and Carmen M. Reinhart. 2002. “Fear of Floating.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 117 (2): 379–408.). However, Latin American economies have reduced their debt in foreign currency since the early 2000s. Moreover, these economies extensively increased their amount of international reserves in the last decade and some of them – like Colombia and Mexico – have even reached the IMF’s flexible credit line, which operates as an international lender of last resort. All these changes – lower liability dollarization, higher international reserves, and new collaterals – suggest that the fear of devaluating in Latin America should be lower. Nevertheless, floating has not been the decision in terms of exchange rate policy. Conversely, most of Latin American countries that announced free floating opted for managed floating regimes and discretional interventions, in what can be considered as a new era of fear of floating. This paper finds empirical evidence that the main motivation for fear of floating has changed during the recent boom in commodity prices, 2005–2013, when foreign exchange interventions under flexible regimes were focused on avoiding excessive currency appreciations and apparently preventing Dutch disease.
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对漂浮恐惧的新驱动因素:来自拉丁美洲的证据
摘要文献中有一个共识,即在90年代,新兴经济体担心浮动的主要原因是私营和公共部门的过度负债美元化,这导致了央行对汇率的干预。这些干预措施的主要目的是防止货币贬值对资产负债表产生负面影响。拉丁美洲当然符合这一描述,正如Calvo和Reinhart令人信服地记录的那样(Calvo,Guillermo A.和Carmen M.Reinhart,2002)。《经济学季刊》117(2):379–408。然而,自21世纪初以来,拉丁美洲经济体已经减少了外币债务。此外,这些经济体在过去十年中大幅增加了国际储备,其中一些经济体——如哥伦比亚和墨西哥——甚至达到了国际货币基金组织的灵活信贷额度,该额度是国际最后贷款人。所有这些变化——较低的负债美元化、较高的国际储备和新的抵押品——表明拉丁美洲对贬值的担忧应该更低。然而,浮动汇率并不是汇率政策的决定。相反,大多数宣布自由浮动的拉丁美洲国家选择了有管理的浮动制度和自由干预,这可以被视为一个对浮动的恐惧的新时代。本文发现,实证证据表明,在最近的商品价格繁荣期间(2005-2013年),担心浮动的主要动机发生了变化,当时灵活制度下的外汇干预侧重于避免货币过度升值和明显预防荷兰病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Globalization and Development
Journal of Globalization and Development Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (all)
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: The Journal of Globalization and Development (JGD) publishes academic research and policy analysis on globalization, development, and in particular the complex interactions between them. The journal is dedicated to stimulating a creative dialogue between theoretical advances and rigorous empirical studies to push forward the frontiers of development analysis. It also seeks to combine innovative academic insights with the in-depth knowledge of practitioners to address important policy issues. JGD encourages diverse perspectives on all aspects of development and globalization, and attempts to integrate the best development research from across different fields with contributions from scholars in developing and developed countries. Topics: -Economic development- Financial investments- Development Aid- Development policies- Growth models- Sovereign debt
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