Currency crises and institutions [An article from: Journal of International Money and Finance]
Book Details
Author(s)P.L. Shimpalee, J.B. Breuer
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR4XY0
ISBN-13978B000RR4XY0
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of International Money and Finance, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
This study furthers recent literature on currency crises and institutions. The main objective is to re-evaluate the causes of currency crises by focusing on the role played by a broader array of institutional factors and crisis episodes than have previously been considered while at the same time controlling for economic factors. Our dataset consists of over 30 countries covering 13 institutional factors for the period 1984-2002. Two questions are addressed. They are (1) what mix of institutions may contribute to or set the stage for a currency crisis? and (2) what mix of institutions may affect the depth of currency crises as measured by a decline in output? Our findings reveal that institutional as well as economic factors affect the probability of currency crises and that worse institutions are associated with bigger contractions in output during the crisis. In general, our strongest results regarding institutions show that corruption, a de facto fixed exchange rate regime, weak government stability, and weak law and order increase the probability of a currency crisis. We find mixed evidence that deposit insurance, the removal of capital controls, a lack of central bank independence, financial liberalization, and civil law increase the chance of crisis. We find a similar set of factors worsens the contraction in output during a crisis except for deposit insurance, which we find moderates the contraction in output.
Description:
This study furthers recent literature on currency crises and institutions. The main objective is to re-evaluate the causes of currency crises by focusing on the role played by a broader array of institutional factors and crisis episodes than have previously been considered while at the same time controlling for economic factors. Our dataset consists of over 30 countries covering 13 institutional factors for the period 1984-2002. Two questions are addressed. They are (1) what mix of institutions may contribute to or set the stage for a currency crisis? and (2) what mix of institutions may affect the depth of currency crises as measured by a decline in output? Our findings reveal that institutional as well as economic factors affect the probability of currency crises and that worse institutions are associated with bigger contractions in output during the crisis. In general, our strongest results regarding institutions show that corruption, a de facto fixed exchange rate regime, weak government stability, and weak law and order increase the probability of a currency crisis. We find mixed evidence that deposit insurance, the removal of capital controls, a lack of central bank independence, financial liberalization, and civil law increase the chance of crisis. We find a similar set of factors worsens the contraction in output during a crisis except for deposit insurance, which we find moderates the contraction in output.
