1 / 15

Financial Crises

Financial Crises. East Asia 1997, Russia 1998, Brazil ?. Background to 1997 East Asian crisis. Fundamentalist view Contagion view Three factors : Macro policy in OECD Domestic mismanagement Investor panic. Exchange Rates. Goldstein 1998. Stock Markets. Goldstein 1998.

Download Presentation

Financial Crises

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Financial Crises East Asia 1997, Russia 1998, Brazil ?

  2. Background to 1997 East Asian crisis • Fundamentalist view • Contagion view Three factors: • Macro policy in OECD • Domestic mismanagement • Investor panic

  3. Exchange Rates Goldstein 1998

  4. Stock Markets Goldstein 1998

  5. IMF Growth Forecasts for 1998 Goldstein 1998

  6. External Causes • Credit boom in the 1990s • Low interest rates in the U.S. and Japan • Expansion of portfolio funds • $420 billion net flows to Asian emerging markets • Deteriorating current account • Overvalued real exchange rates • Slowing exports and increasing competition

  7. External Sector Goldstein 1998

  8. Financial Market Vulnerabilities Capital inflows concentrated: • Real estate (30-40% of bank lending) • Equities • Borrowing in foreign currencies w/ short maturities Why?

  9. Financial Market Supervision • Weak banking sectors—high ratios of nonperforming loans • Lack of transparency, sound accounting procedures • Inadequate loan-loss reserves • Corrupt lending • Banks as quasi-fiscal agents

  10. Precipitating event • Thailand—CB reserves depleted, rolling over government debt • S. Korea—rolling over foreign-currency denominated bank liabilities • Indonesia—corporations attempt to hedge their currency positions

  11. Contagion • Trade linkages? • Hard to explain contagion from small countries to large ones • Competitive devaluation? • Same objection • Goldstein’s “wake-up call” hypothesis • Do capital markets sleep? • Rational buffalo

  12. Russia 1998 • Fixed exchange rate, overvalued in real terms • Incentive to run a fiscal deficit • Election of 1996 • Collapse of tax revenues • Nominal debt • High interest rates • Central Banking dilemmas • Bail-out of 1998

  13. Why not Brazil in 2002? • Public debt to GDP: 60% • Of which, linked to the dollar: 40% • Spread over U.S. treasuries: 18% • Devaluation: >40% in 2002 • $30 billion IMF program in August • Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (Lula) elected in October

  14. First Steps • Reaffirm primary surplus goal of 3.75% of GDP, an IMF condition • Propose legislation to strengthen Central Bank’s independence • Conservative appointments • Postponing populist agenda

  15. Discussion Do IMF rescue packages help countries that face financial crises?

More Related