The recent euro area crisis shows some similarities with the fixed exchange rate crisis that affected the European Monetary System in 1992–93. I argue that the theoretical framework to be used in order to analyze them should also be similar. As a matter of fact, in both cases, the point of view of the government (that compares costs and benefits of its action) should be considered together with the point of view of speculators, who look at the state of the economic fundamentals in order to decide whether to launch an attack or not. This allows to represent and to interpret, among other things, both the initial “honeymoon” years of EMU and the recent euro area crisis
We explore the role of expectations in second generation currency crisis models, proving that sudden...
This paper demonstrates that the implications of first-generation speculative attack models do not h...
The idea that the Euro zone sovereign debt crisis was caused by structural weaknesses degenerating i...
The recent euro area crisis shows some similarities with the fixed exchange rate crisis that affecte...
The euro area crisis has been characterized by speculative attacks reflecting the market fear that s...
This paper shows that the approach followed by Tamborini (2015) in analyzing and interpreting the eu...
This article nests the explanations of the euro crisis in terms of economic, political and instituti...
The application of exchange rates target zones modeling to interest rates allows interpreting the p...
I argue that the origin of the Eurozone crisis lies neither in unsustainable borrowing nor in arbitr...
While virtually all currency crisismodels recognise that the fate of a currency peg depends on how t...
This paper proposes a theory of twin banking-currency crises in which both fundamentals and self-ful...
Half a decade has passed since the subprime market financial meltdown, which was the onset for the E...
In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental d...
The sovereign debt crisis in the Eurozone began with the global economic recession that started in 2...
The euro area crisis has been commonly interpreted as due to divergences in economic fundamentals re...
We explore the role of expectations in second generation currency crisis models, proving that sudden...
This paper demonstrates that the implications of first-generation speculative attack models do not h...
The idea that the Euro zone sovereign debt crisis was caused by structural weaknesses degenerating i...
The recent euro area crisis shows some similarities with the fixed exchange rate crisis that affecte...
The euro area crisis has been characterized by speculative attacks reflecting the market fear that s...
This paper shows that the approach followed by Tamborini (2015) in analyzing and interpreting the eu...
This article nests the explanations of the euro crisis in terms of economic, political and instituti...
The application of exchange rates target zones modeling to interest rates allows interpreting the p...
I argue that the origin of the Eurozone crisis lies neither in unsustainable borrowing nor in arbitr...
While virtually all currency crisismodels recognise that the fate of a currency peg depends on how t...
This paper proposes a theory of twin banking-currency crises in which both fundamentals and self-ful...
Half a decade has passed since the subprime market financial meltdown, which was the onset for the E...
In this analytical policy brief, CEPS Director Daniel Gros explores whether there is a fundamental d...
The sovereign debt crisis in the Eurozone began with the global economic recession that started in 2...
The euro area crisis has been commonly interpreted as due to divergences in economic fundamentals re...
We explore the role of expectations in second generation currency crisis models, proving that sudden...
This paper demonstrates that the implications of first-generation speculative attack models do not h...
The idea that the Euro zone sovereign debt crisis was caused by structural weaknesses degenerating i...