In the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis, the issue of the choice of exchange rate regime for East Asian (EA) countries re-emerged. The crisis had demonstrated, amongst other things, that unilateral exchange rate regimes (including de facto dollar pegging) hadnt coped very well in the 1990s faced with massive capital inflows into the region (Kwan et al., 1998), with the possible exceptions of Singapore and Taiwan. The immediate response to the crisis was that a corner solution might be better. Either keep convertibility and fix the currency, preferably backed up with a currency board, but abandon monetary independence; or keep monetary policy and convertibility but abandon currency management and adopt a free float. But a hard peg is ...
Although we experienced the Asian currency crisis under the de facto dollar peg system, linkages of ...
his article examined post-crisis exchange rate management in selected East Asian countries in terms ...
Recent financial crises seem to have led to the broad consensus that developing countries should ste...
This paper analyzes exchange rate flexibility in East Asia and explores what has changed since the A...
The objective of this paper is see how well Singapore’s exchange rate regime has coped with exchange...
We examine the difference that various exchange rate arrangements can make toward stabilizing effect...
This paper studies the evolution of the exchange rate regime on East Asian economies between pre- an...
This paper discusses major conceptual and empirical issues relevant to the exchange rate policies of...
This paper analyzes the ad hoc decision of three Asian countries to peg their currency to the U.S. d...
This paper examines the evolution of exchange rate arrangements in East Asia's emerging market econo...
This study assesses prospective Asian exchange rate regimes and finds short- and longrun currency d...
Exchange rate management has become a hot topic in academic circles examining the merits of fixed ve...
Asian economies have undergone significant transformation since 1997/98 financial crisis. In order t...
Abstract: Exchange rate volatility can be detrimental to growth and stability. For East Asian countr...
The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.comEver since the outbreak of the cur...
Although we experienced the Asian currency crisis under the de facto dollar peg system, linkages of ...
his article examined post-crisis exchange rate management in selected East Asian countries in terms ...
Recent financial crises seem to have led to the broad consensus that developing countries should ste...
This paper analyzes exchange rate flexibility in East Asia and explores what has changed since the A...
The objective of this paper is see how well Singapore’s exchange rate regime has coped with exchange...
We examine the difference that various exchange rate arrangements can make toward stabilizing effect...
This paper studies the evolution of the exchange rate regime on East Asian economies between pre- an...
This paper discusses major conceptual and empirical issues relevant to the exchange rate policies of...
This paper analyzes the ad hoc decision of three Asian countries to peg their currency to the U.S. d...
This paper examines the evolution of exchange rate arrangements in East Asia's emerging market econo...
This study assesses prospective Asian exchange rate regimes and finds short- and longrun currency d...
Exchange rate management has become a hot topic in academic circles examining the merits of fixed ve...
Asian economies have undergone significant transformation since 1997/98 financial crisis. In order t...
Abstract: Exchange rate volatility can be detrimental to growth and stability. For East Asian countr...
The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.comEver since the outbreak of the cur...
Although we experienced the Asian currency crisis under the de facto dollar peg system, linkages of ...
his article examined post-crisis exchange rate management in selected East Asian countries in terms ...
Recent financial crises seem to have led to the broad consensus that developing countries should ste...