Financial Crises in Emerging Markets: The Lessons from 1995

The Mexican peso crisis of December 1994, and its reverberations in the financial markets of developing countries around the world, has intensified the debate over the nature of balance of payments crises in developing countries. Many simple explanations have been given for the crisis and its afterm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brookings papers on economic activity 1996-01, Vol.1996 (1), p.147-215
Hauptverfasser: Sachs, Jeffrey D., Tornell, Aaron, Velasco, Andrés, Calvo, Guillermo A., Cooper, Richard N.
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container_end_page 215
container_issue 1
container_start_page 147
container_title Brookings papers on economic activity
container_volume 1996
creator Sachs, Jeffrey D.
Tornell, Aaron
Velasco, Andrés
Calvo, Guillermo A.
Cooper, Richard N.
description The Mexican peso crisis of December 1994, and its reverberations in the financial markets of developing countries around the world, has intensified the debate over the nature of balance of payments crises in developing countries. Many simple explanations have been given for the crisis and its aftermath, but none of them does very well at accounting for the main patterns of behavior in emerging markets during late 1994 and 1995. The financial events following the devaluation of the Mexican peso are examined to uncover new lessons about the nature of financial crises. A simple model is presented that identifies three factors that determine whether a country is vulnerable to financial crisis: a large appreciation or the real exchange rate, a weak banking system, and low levels of foreign exchange reserves. Many of the alternative hypotheses that have been put forth to explain such crises are not supported by the data. While there were many reasons for a devaluation of the Mexican peso at that time, the speculative attack and the magnitude of the resulting currency depreciation went far beyond what was inevitable based on Mexico's fundamental conditions.
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Many simple explanations have been given for the crisis and its aftermath, but none of them does very well at accounting for the main patterns of behavior in emerging markets during late 1994 and 1995. The financial events following the devaluation of the Mexican peso are examined to uncover new lessons about the nature of financial crises. A simple model is presented that identifies three factors that determine whether a country is vulnerable to financial crisis: a large appreciation or the real exchange rate, a weak banking system, and low levels of foreign exchange reserves. Many of the alternative hypotheses that have been put forth to explain such crises are not supported by the data. While there were many reasons for a devaluation of the Mexican peso at that time, the speculative attack and the magnitude of the resulting currency depreciation went far beyond what was inevitable based on Mexico's fundamental conditions.</abstract><cop>Washington</cop><pub>The Brookings Institution</pub><doi>10.2307/2534648</doi><tpages>69</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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identifier ISSN: 0007-2303
ispartof Brookings papers on economic activity, 1996-01, Vol.1996 (1), p.147-215
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0007-2303
language eng
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source PAIS Index; Business Source Complete; JSTOR; EZB Electronic Journals Library
subjects Balance of payments
Bank loans
Bank reserves
Banking crises
Banking industry
Capital inflows
Capital losses
Central banks
Commercial banks
Currency
Currency devaluation
Developing countries
Economic conditions
Economic crises
Economic crisis
Economic models
Economics
Emerging markets
Federal budget deficit
Foreign exchange rates
GDP
Gross Domestic Product
Hypotheses
Interest rates
Investments
Investors
LDCs
Loans
Pesos
Real exchange rates
Recessions
Regression analysis
Securities markets
Studies
title Financial Crises in Emerging Markets: The Lessons from 1995
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