A "Vertical" Analysis of Crises and Intervention: Fear of Floating and Ex-Ante Problems

33 Pages Posted: 14 Aug 2001 Last revised: 14 Jul 2022

See all articles by Ricardo J. Caballero

Ricardo J. Caballero

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - Department of Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Arvind Krishnamurthy

Northwestern University - Kellogg School of Management

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: August 2001

Abstract

Emerging economies are prone to crises triggered by external shocks. During these crises, should the central bank stabilize the currency or domestic interest rates? If the choice is outside the central bank's control, as in a currency board, are there good policy substitutes? We argue that these questions are best analyzed in a 'vertical' framework, where the supply of external funds faced by the country is inelastic during the crisis and monetary policy affects mostly the domestic cost of scarce international liquidity. This is in contrast to the standard 'horizontal' framework where supply is elastic at the (now higher) international interest rate. In this vertical view, raising domestic interest rates during a crisis has relatively limited output consequences, while not doing so causes a sharp exchange rate overshooting. This asymmetry naturally leads to the widely observed fear of floating. However, while this response is ex-post rationalizable, it has negative ex-ante consequences as it exacerbates the structurally insufficient private sector incentives to insure against crises. Ex-ante, optimal monetary policy is countercyclical, and increasingly so as financial development falls. The silver lining for countries with limited financial development that cannot (or should not) overcome this conservative-central-bank time inconsistency problem, is that since the main role of monetary policy in the vertical view is one of incentives, it can be substituted by ex-ante measures to induce the private sector to insure against crises.

Suggested Citation

Caballero, Ricardo J. and Krishnamurthy, Arvind, A "Vertical" Analysis of Crises and Intervention: Fear of Floating and Ex-Ante Problems (August 2001). NBER Working Paper No. w8428, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=279715

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