This note summarizes some of the highlights of my longer paper with Guillermo Calvo”Fear of Floating.” Many emerging market countries have suffered financial crises. One view blames soft pegs for these crises. Adherents to that view suggest that countries move to corner solutions--hard pegs or floating exchange rates. We analyze the behavior of exchange rates, reserves, and interest rates to assess whether there is evidence that country practice is moving toward corner solutions. We focus on whether countries that claim they are floating are indeed doing so. We find that countries that say they allow their exchange rate to float mostly do not--there seems to be an epidemic case of “fear of floating.
The impermanence of fixed exchange rates has become a stylized fact in international finance. The co...
This paper is written to address the problem of having floating or fixed exchange rates. My results ...
Evidence suggests that developing countries are more concerned with stabilizing the nominal exchange...
This note summarizes some of the highlights of my longer paper with Guillermo Calvo”Fear of Floating...
Many emerging market countries have suffered financial crises. One view blames soft pegs for these c...
In recent years, many countries have suffered severe financial crises, producing a staggering toll ...
Many emerging market countries have suffered financial crises. One view blames soft pegs for these c...
Countries that are classified as having floating exchange rate systems (or very wide bands) show str...
During the past few years, many emerging market countries have suffered severe currency and banking ...
The paper finds that exchange rate flexibility in emerging market countries has increased over the p...
The Asian crisis took place against a background of exchange rate regimes that were characterized as...
The following paper is a summary article about the choice of exchange rate regime for a developing c...
This paper argues that much of the debate on choosing an exchange rate regime misses the boat. It be...
Most countries which have experienced exchange rate crises over the last two decades have been under...
This paper revisits the fear of floating hypotheses for eight African countries from the collapse of...
The impermanence of fixed exchange rates has become a stylized fact in international finance. The co...
This paper is written to address the problem of having floating or fixed exchange rates. My results ...
Evidence suggests that developing countries are more concerned with stabilizing the nominal exchange...
This note summarizes some of the highlights of my longer paper with Guillermo Calvo”Fear of Floating...
Many emerging market countries have suffered financial crises. One view blames soft pegs for these c...
In recent years, many countries have suffered severe financial crises, producing a staggering toll ...
Many emerging market countries have suffered financial crises. One view blames soft pegs for these c...
Countries that are classified as having floating exchange rate systems (or very wide bands) show str...
During the past few years, many emerging market countries have suffered severe currency and banking ...
The paper finds that exchange rate flexibility in emerging market countries has increased over the p...
The Asian crisis took place against a background of exchange rate regimes that were characterized as...
The following paper is a summary article about the choice of exchange rate regime for a developing c...
This paper argues that much of the debate on choosing an exchange rate regime misses the boat. It be...
Most countries which have experienced exchange rate crises over the last two decades have been under...
This paper revisits the fear of floating hypotheses for eight African countries from the collapse of...
The impermanence of fixed exchange rates has become a stylized fact in international finance. The co...
This paper is written to address the problem of having floating or fixed exchange rates. My results ...
Evidence suggests that developing countries are more concerned with stabilizing the nominal exchange...