To update a famous old statistic: a political leader in a developing country is almost twice as likely to lose office in the six months following a currency crash as other-wise. This difference, which is highly significant statistically, holds regardless of whether the devaluation takes place in the context of an IMF program. Why are devaluations so costly? Many of the currency crises of the last 10 years have been associated with output loss. Is this, as alleged, because of excessive reliance on rais-ing the interest rate as a policy response? More likely it is because of contractionary effects of devaluation. There are various possible contractionary effects of devalua-tion, but it is appropriate that the balance sheet effect receives the...
Are devaluations contractionary? This question has been with us for a long time. The conventio...
The article uses a post Kaleckian model to analyze how currency devaluations affect aggregate demand...
Are devaluations contractionary? This question has been with us for a long time. The conventional Ke...
To update a famous old statistic: a political leader in a developing country is twice as likely to l...
Recent empirical and theoretical literature on the impact of real exchange rate devaluations on econ...
The stylised facts of currency crises in emerging markets include output contraction coming hard on ...
Recent empirical and theoretical literature on the impact of real exchange rate devaluations on econ...
In emerging markets, external debt is denominated almost entirely in large, developed country curren...
In emerging markets, external debt is denominated almost entirely in large, developed country curren...
In this paper we show that, in the aftermath of a currency crisis, a government that adjusts the nom...
The loss of output in major recessions tends to be permanent. Using IMF de facto exchange rate regim...
The purpose of the paper is to examine the impact of real exchange rate changes - real devaluation o...
This paper analyzes the behavior of output during currency crises using a sample of 195 crisis episo...
In chapter 1, I ask whether an exchange rate depreciation depresses trading partners' output. I addr...
After the speculative attacks on government-controlled exchange rates in Europe and in Mexico, econo...
Are devaluations contractionary? This question has been with us for a long time. The conventio...
The article uses a post Kaleckian model to analyze how currency devaluations affect aggregate demand...
Are devaluations contractionary? This question has been with us for a long time. The conventional Ke...
To update a famous old statistic: a political leader in a developing country is twice as likely to l...
Recent empirical and theoretical literature on the impact of real exchange rate devaluations on econ...
The stylised facts of currency crises in emerging markets include output contraction coming hard on ...
Recent empirical and theoretical literature on the impact of real exchange rate devaluations on econ...
In emerging markets, external debt is denominated almost entirely in large, developed country curren...
In emerging markets, external debt is denominated almost entirely in large, developed country curren...
In this paper we show that, in the aftermath of a currency crisis, a government that adjusts the nom...
The loss of output in major recessions tends to be permanent. Using IMF de facto exchange rate regim...
The purpose of the paper is to examine the impact of real exchange rate changes - real devaluation o...
This paper analyzes the behavior of output during currency crises using a sample of 195 crisis episo...
In chapter 1, I ask whether an exchange rate depreciation depresses trading partners' output. I addr...
After the speculative attacks on government-controlled exchange rates in Europe and in Mexico, econo...
Are devaluations contractionary? This question has been with us for a long time. The conventio...
The article uses a post Kaleckian model to analyze how currency devaluations affect aggregate demand...
Are devaluations contractionary? This question has been with us for a long time. The conventional Ke...