Balance Sheets and Exchange Rate Policy
49 Pages Posted: 20 Aug 2000 Last revised: 5 Jun 2022
Date Written: August 2000
Abstract
We study the relation among exchange rates, balance sheets, and macroeconomic outcomes in a small open economy. Because liabilities are dollarized,' a real devaluation has detrimental effects on entreprenurial net worth, which in turn constrains investment due to financial frictions. But there is an offsetting effect, int hat devaluation expands home output and the return to domestic investment, which are also components of net worth. We show that the impact of an adverse foreign shock can be strongly magnified by the balance sheet effect of the associated real devaluation. But the fall in output employment, and investment is stronger under fixed exchange rates than under flexible rates. Hence the conventional wisdom, that flexible exchange rates are better absorbers of real foreign shocks than are fixed rates, holds in spite of potentially large balance sheet effects.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
International and Domestic Collateral Constraints in a Model of Emerging Market Crises
-
International and Domestic Collateral Constraints in a Model of Emerging Market Crises
-
On the Empirics of Sudden Stops: The Relevance of Balance-Sheet Effects
By Guillermo A. Calvo, Alejandro Izquierdo, ...
-
Currency Crises and Monetary Policy in an Economy with Credit Constraints
By Philippe Aghion, Abhijit V. Banerjee, ...
-
On the Empirics of Sudden Stops: The Relevance of Balance-Sheet Effects
By Guillermo A. Calvo, Alejandro Izquierdo, ...
-
Current Account Reversals and Currency Crises: Empirical Regularities
-
Sudden Stops, the Real Exchange Rate, and Fiscal Sustainability: Argentina's Lessons
By Guillermo A. Calvo, Alejandro Izquierdo, ...
-
Sudden Stops, the Real Exchange Rate and Fiscal Sustainability: Argentina's Lessons
By Alejandro Izquierdo, Ernesto Talvi, ...
-
Thirty Years of Current Account Imbalances, Current Account Reversals and Sudden Stops
-
Excessive Dollar Debt: Financial Development and Underinsurance