Do international lenders of last resort create financial instability by generating moral hazard? The evidence is thin and plagued with measurement error. We use the number of American troops hosted by third countries to measure the strength of American commitment to ensuring the countries’ economic health. We test several hypotheses against a dataset covering about sixty-eight countries between 1960 and 2009. Using evidence from fixed-effects and instrumental-variable models, we find that increasing the number of US troops by one standard deviation above the mean raises the probability of a financial crisis in the host country by up to 13 percentage points. We also investigate the channels through which moral hazard materializes. Countries ...
In this study we resolve part of the confusion over how foreign aid affects armed conflict. We argue...
Using panel data for 106 countries in 1971-1997, we estimate generalized least squares regressions t...
The question being researched is what variables can better explain the level of involvement by the U...
A large literature has established that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is heavily politicized...
One dominant explanation for why crises escalate to war is based on misperception. Alternative ratio...
Foreign investors generally refrain from entering countries with high political risks. As an often s...
Using panel data for 94 countries in 1975–97, we estimate OLS, 2SLS and GMM regressions to explain I...
Exploring the nexus between geopolitical risk (GPR) and military expenditures (ME) has been limited ...
The view that the IMF’s financial support gives rise to moral hazard has become increasingly promine...
The paper presents a robust but previously undocumented data pattern: corporate risk taking is posit...
Abstract: The global financial crisis clearly started with problems in the U.S. subprime sector and...
This paper develops a simple model of international lending, and calibrates it to assess quantitativ...
We test for the existence of a moral hazard effect attributable to official crisis lending by analyz...
Since the end of the Second World War, US troops have served as a powerful tool of US foreign policy...
This paper investigates currency and financial crises in an optimizing general equilibrium model. It...
In this study we resolve part of the confusion over how foreign aid affects armed conflict. We argue...
Using panel data for 106 countries in 1971-1997, we estimate generalized least squares regressions t...
The question being researched is what variables can better explain the level of involvement by the U...
A large literature has established that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is heavily politicized...
One dominant explanation for why crises escalate to war is based on misperception. Alternative ratio...
Foreign investors generally refrain from entering countries with high political risks. As an often s...
Using panel data for 94 countries in 1975–97, we estimate OLS, 2SLS and GMM regressions to explain I...
Exploring the nexus between geopolitical risk (GPR) and military expenditures (ME) has been limited ...
The view that the IMF’s financial support gives rise to moral hazard has become increasingly promine...
The paper presents a robust but previously undocumented data pattern: corporate risk taking is posit...
Abstract: The global financial crisis clearly started with problems in the U.S. subprime sector and...
This paper develops a simple model of international lending, and calibrates it to assess quantitativ...
We test for the existence of a moral hazard effect attributable to official crisis lending by analyz...
Since the end of the Second World War, US troops have served as a powerful tool of US foreign policy...
This paper investigates currency and financial crises in an optimizing general equilibrium model. It...
In this study we resolve part of the confusion over how foreign aid affects armed conflict. We argue...
Using panel data for 106 countries in 1971-1997, we estimate generalized least squares regressions t...
The question being researched is what variables can better explain the level of involvement by the U...