scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBookDOI

Leading Indicators of Currency Crises

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors examine the empirical evidence on currency crises and propose a specific early warning system, which involves monitoring the evolution of several indicators that tend to exhibit unusual behavior in the periods preceding a crisis.
Abstract
The authors examine the empirical evidence on currency crises and propose a specific early-warning system. This system involves monitoring the evolution of several indicators that tend to exhibit unusual behavior in the periods preceding a crisis. An indicator exceeding a certain threshold value should be interpreted as a warning"signal"that a currency crisis may take place within the following 24 months. The threshold values are calculated to strike a balance between the risk of having many false signals and the risk of missing many crises. Within this approach, the variables with the best track record include exports, deviations of the real exchange rate from trend, the ratio of broad money to gross international reserves, output, and equity prices. The evidence does not support some of the other indicators that were considered, including imports, bank deposits,the difference between foreign and domestic real deposit interest rates, and the ratio of lending to deposit interest rates.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Munich Personal RePEc Archive
Leading Indicators of Currency Crises
Reinhart, Carmen and Kaminsky, Graciela and Lizondo, Saul
University of Maryland
1998
Online at https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/6981/
MPRA Paper No. 6981, posted 13 Feb 2008 09:26 UTC





Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

What Matters for Financial Development? Capital Controls, Institutions, and Interactions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate whether financial openness leads to financial development after controlling for the level of legal development using a panel encompassing 108 countries over the period 1980 to 2000, and find that trade openness is a prerequisite for capital account liberalization while banking system development is a precondition for equity market development.
Journal ArticleDOI

What Caused the Asian Currency and Financial Crisis

TL;DR: This article explored the view that the Asian currency and financial crises in 1997 and 1998 reflected structural and policy distortions in the countries of the region, even if market overreaction and herding caused the plunge of exchange rates, asset prices and economic activity to be more severe than warranted by the initial weak economic conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic Crises: Evidence and Insights from East Asia

TL;DR: The recent East Asian crisis is only the latest in a series of spectacular economic catastrophes in developing countries as discussed by the authors, which has led to full-blown economic crises, in many cases with GDP contractions of 5 to 12 percent in the first year and negative or only slightly positive growth for several years after.
Posted Content

On crises, contagion, and confusion

TL;DR: This paper examined the role of international bank lending, the potential for cross-market hedging, and bilateral and third-party trade in the propagation of crises, and found that both trade links and the largely ignored financial sector links influence the pattern of fundamentals-based contagion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Macroprudential policy – a literature review

TL;DR: The recent financial crisis has highlighted the need to go beyond a purely micro approach to financial regulation and supervision and the number of policy speeches, research papers and conferences that discuss a macro perspective on financial regulation has grown considerably.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Twin Crises: The Causes of Banking and Balance-Of-Payments Problems

TL;DR: The authors analyzes the links between banking and currency crises and finds that problems in the banking sector typically precede a currency crisis, activating a vicious spiral; financial liberalization often precedes banking crises.
Posted Content

The twin crises: the causes of banking and balance-of-payments problems

TL;DR: This paper examined the potential links between banking and balance-of-payments crises and found that financial liberalization usually predates banking crises, indeed, it helps predict them, rather than a causal relationship from banking to balance of payments crises.
Journal ArticleDOI

Currency crashes in emerging markets: An empirical treatment

TL;DR: The authors defined a currency crash as a large change of the nominal exchange rate that is also a substantial increase in the rate of change of nominal depreciation, and used a panel of annual data for over 100 developing countries from 1971 through 1992 to characterize currency crashes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exchange market mayhem: the antecedents and aftermath of speculative attacks

TL;DR: Eichengreen et al. as discussed by the authors evaluated the causes and consequences of episodes of turbulence in foreign exchange markets using data from 1959 through 1993 for twenty OECD countries, and concluded that there are no clear early warning signals of many speculative attacks, and no easy solutions for policy-makers.
Related Papers (5)