International capital markets are inherently unstable, and may precipitate an unnecessary currency crisis as a result of a failure by differentiated investors to coordinate their actions in response to a “mild” fundamental shock. This paper illustrates the point in a simple 3-period model, in which two heterogeneous risk-averse representative investors enter the market at different stages, and a policy-maker who, having to adjust to a current account shock, faces the decision whether or not to devalue the currency. A range of values for the shock is identified over which two equilibria, both rational, coexist. In the “good” equilibrium absence of capital flight and ongoing lending allow an orderly adjustment (no regime switch); in the “bad”...
This paper provides an empirical framework to analyse the nature of currency crises byextending earl...
The frequency of currency crises has increased drastically in the last 30 years, and the scale and i...
This paper was presented at the NBER Conference on Currency Crises, Cambridge, Mass., February 6 an...
Obstfeld (1994) shows that a currency crisis can be explained by the occurrence of multiple equi- l...
This paper investigates currency and financial crises in an optimizing general equilibrium model. It...
The paper presents a general equilibrium currency crises model of the "third generation", in which t...
Currency crises and multiple equilibria: the role of co-ordination failures among heterogeneous inve...
This paper shows that the approach followed by Tamborini (2015) in analyzing and interpreting the eu...
Loss of confidence is interpreted as an increase in the ambiguity experienced by investors who maxim...
The 1997 Asian crisis triggered major breakthroughs in ways in which financial vulnerability, and in...
This paper considers the question of currency crisis in a dynamic setting in which agents do nothold...
Market participants’ risk attitudes, wealth and portfolio composition influence their positions in a...
When does the combination of flexible exchange rates and inflation-targeting monetary policy guarant...
Traditional approaches to the etiology of financial crises focus on the fundamentals of an economy, ...
We model a typical Asian-crisis-economy using dynamic general equilibrium tech-niques. Exchange rate...
This paper provides an empirical framework to analyse the nature of currency crises byextending earl...
The frequency of currency crises has increased drastically in the last 30 years, and the scale and i...
This paper was presented at the NBER Conference on Currency Crises, Cambridge, Mass., February 6 an...
Obstfeld (1994) shows that a currency crisis can be explained by the occurrence of multiple equi- l...
This paper investigates currency and financial crises in an optimizing general equilibrium model. It...
The paper presents a general equilibrium currency crises model of the "third generation", in which t...
Currency crises and multiple equilibria: the role of co-ordination failures among heterogeneous inve...
This paper shows that the approach followed by Tamborini (2015) in analyzing and interpreting the eu...
Loss of confidence is interpreted as an increase in the ambiguity experienced by investors who maxim...
The 1997 Asian crisis triggered major breakthroughs in ways in which financial vulnerability, and in...
This paper considers the question of currency crisis in a dynamic setting in which agents do nothold...
Market participants’ risk attitudes, wealth and portfolio composition influence their positions in a...
When does the combination of flexible exchange rates and inflation-targeting monetary policy guarant...
Traditional approaches to the etiology of financial crises focus on the fundamentals of an economy, ...
We model a typical Asian-crisis-economy using dynamic general equilibrium tech-niques. Exchange rate...
This paper provides an empirical framework to analyse the nature of currency crises byextending earl...
The frequency of currency crises has increased drastically in the last 30 years, and the scale and i...
This paper was presented at the NBER Conference on Currency Crises, Cambridge, Mass., February 6 an...