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FDI - summary after intermediate

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Summary of FDI, Trade and Geography - chapters after intermediate (part 2)

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  • Intermediate
  • April 25, 2016
  • 22
  • 2015/2016
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FDI, trade & geography – lecture 5-lecture 7
Lecture 5: downsides of international capital mobility: currency
crises
9.2: What are currency crises?
Flexible exchange rates  value of exchange rate is determined by
market forces  exchange rate fluctuates (i.e. euro vs. US$).
Fixed exchange rates  central bank defines target rate and band
around it. Foreign exchange interventions if market rate moves outside of
the band (i.e. Danish krona vs. euro).

Currency crisis  strong exchange rate pressure that would result in a
substantial appreciation or depreciation of a currency over a short period
of time.
- = a downside of capital mobility
- Usually in the context of currency depreciation
- Most damaging in fixed exchange rate regimes (agents do not
expect an appreciation or depreciation)
- Must not lead to actual depreciation/appreciation  exchange rate
pressure alone sufficient if it forces central bank to substantially
intervene

‘’Archetypical’’ currency crisis:
- Loss of confidence in economy/currency (by investors)
- (Large-scale) sales of domestic financial asset (= speculative attack)
 exchange rate pressure
- Central bank tries to fight the attack by:
o Raising interest rates
o Selling foreign reserve assets against local currency
- If measures are not successful: sharp depreciation of the local
currency

Currency crisis indicator  captures the extent of exchange rate
pressure based on:
- Change in the exchange rate (forced to adjust fixed exchange rate
because of the speculative attack)
- Change in the short-term interest rate (forced to adjust interest rates
to fight the speculative attack)
- Change in foreign reserve assets (forced to sell/buy foreign reserve
assets to fight the speculative attack)
(Eichengreen, Rose, and Wyplosz, 1995)
- What matters for an event to qualify as a currency crisis is the
amount of exchange rate pressure.
- Not only an actual change in the exchange rate qualifies as a
currency crisis ( successful attack)
- A currency crisis also occurs if a country can defend the fixed
exchange rate by adjusting its interest rates/trading foreign reserve
assets ( unsuccessful attack)

, - Bordo et al. (2001): frequency of currency crisis has increased from
1% before WWI to 7% in the 1990s. Reason: emerging markets,
increased capital mobility)

9.3: Characteristics of currency crises
- Reversal of capital flows (loss of confidence in economy/currency
leads to sell of domestic assets/withdrawal of capital  FA decrease)
- Adjustment of current account: CA increase (since CA+FA = 0)
- Increased real value of foreign debt (due to devaluation of currency)
- Reduction in GDP growth (due to higher interest rates, fewer funds
available for domestic investment due to capital outflow, higher real
debt)

9.4: First-generation models of currency crises
Different theories have been developed to explain and understand
currency crises.
1st generation models: crisis due to bad macroeconomic conditions
(‘bad fundamentals’)
2nd generation models: role of investors in triggering a crisis.

1st and 2nd generation model differ along two dimensions:
- Rationale for the crisis: flawed domestic economy vs. purely
speculative actions
- Role of international investors: react to crisis (passive) vs. influence
the outcome of the crisis (active)

First-generation models: overview
- Based on Krugman (1979) and Flood and Garber (1984)
- Key source for the crisis is unsustainable fiscal policy (‘bad
fundamentals’): excessive government spending
- Investors play a passive role
- Devaluation is the only possible outcome

Key elements:
- Increasing money supply is the result of loaning the government and
buying foreign reserve assets: dM = dF + dR
o dM > 0: increase in money supply
o dF > 0: expansionary fiscal policy
o dR > 0: purchase of foreign reserve assets
- The money supply influences the price level:
P = m(M), with dP/dM > 0
 an increase in the money supply (dM > 0) leads to inflation dP > 0)
- PPP condition: P = E x P* (P*: foreign price level)
 E has to adjust when P changes: inflation (P increases) leads to a
devaluation of the domestic currency (E increases)

First-generation models:
- Government runs a constant budget deficit financed by loans from
the central bank (dF > 0)

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