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Anatomy of a Currency Crisis What Constitutes a “Crisis” ? Large, rapid depreciation of a currency price Sudden, dramatic, reversal in private capital flows The “Crisis” period is typically followed by a recession. Note: The names and dates have been changed to protect the innocent! Exchange Rate (per $US) 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 Crisis Date 28 25 22 19 16 13 10 7 4 1 -2 -5 -8 -11 -14 -17 20 Foreign Investment (Millions of $s) 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 FDI Portfolio 1000 500 -1000 21 17 13 9 5 1 -3 -7 -11 -15 -19 -500 -23 0 Currency Pegs Imagine yourself driving down a straight stretch of road. If the alignment on your car is good, you can let go of the steering wheel and the car stays on the road…… Currency Pegs However, if your alignment is not perfect, you need to act to stay on the road. Otherwise… Currency Pegs On the other hand, your alignment could be perfect, but if the road has an unexpected curve…. Currency Pegs A peg above the equilibrium will involve buying your currency (loss of reserves) F/$ Supply e A peg at the equilibrium price can be maintained forever! e A peg below the equilibrium price will involve selling your currency (increase in reserves) e Demand $ Remember, a country only has a finite supply of foreign reserves….once their gone, the game is over! Liabilities $ 10,000,000 (Currency) reserve ratio = 59% Assets E 2,000,000 (Euro) E 3,000,000 (ECB Bonds) E 5,000,000 X 1.30 $/E $ 6,500,000 $ 3,500,000 (T-Bills) $10,000,000 Bad Policies… Initially , a country is pegging at or near the equilibrium value of its currency F/$ Supply e Demand $ An incompatible policy could pull the equilibrium away from the pegged level – this forces a loss in reserves! Bad Policies… F/$ Supply Supply’ e e Demand $ …or Bad Luck! Initially , a country is pegging at or near the equilibrium value of its currency F/$ Supply e Demand $ or Bad Luck! F/$ Supply e e Suddenly, demand drops – this lowers the equilibrium exchange rate and forces the central banks to act (buying back currency and losing reserves) Demand Demand’ $ What causes these sudden reversals? •Persistent inflation •High Money Growth Bad Policy •Low Economic Growth •Large Deficits •Public Just the facts ma’am. •Private •Political Events Bad Luck •Natural Disasters •Market Sentiment Inflation Rates (Annualized) 12 10 US Average Inflation 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -29 -24 -19 -14 -9 -4 1 6 11 16 21 26 Economic Growth Rates (Annualized) 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 -8 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 M2 Growth (Annualized) Average = 14% 60 40 20 0 -20 -40 -60 Average = 4% Government Deficit (Millions) 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 -10,000 -20,000 -30,000 -40,000 -50,000 Trade Deficit (Millions) 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 -1,000 -2,000 -3,000 -4,000 Interest Rate (Overnight Rates) 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Official Reserve Assets (Millions of $) Central Bank Defense of Currency 1000 950 40,000 38,000 36,000 34,000 32,000 30,000 28,000 26,000 24,000 22,000 20,000 900 850 800 750 700 650 600 Gold Foreign Exchange Long Run Fundamentals Recall, the monetary framework with flexible prices (long run) resulted in the following (1+i) M Y* e = M* Y (1+i*) Relative Money Stocks Relative Output Relative Interest Rates Long Run Fundamentals High money growth and low economic growth generate inflation (Domestic Money Market) Domestic inflation generates expectations of a currency depreciation (PPP) High inflation raises nominal interest rates. This further lowers money demand (which creates even more inflation Short Run Deficits Trade Deficits create excess supply of currency. This creates expectations of a depreciation Large government deficits create the fear that the government might “monetize” the debt (Pay it off by printing money) Both deficits raise domestic interest rates. This makes domestic investment more expensive. As domestic investment slows down, so does economic growth How big is “too big”? When does a trade deficit become unsustainable? PV(Lifetime CA) = 0 (all debts must be repaid) We need to examine the country’s ability to run trade surpluses in the future (i.e. repay its debts!) Generally speaking, a trade deficit greater than 5% of a country’s GDP is considered “too big” Productivity Productivity measures the ability of a country to transform inputs into output Revenues Labor Capital (Shareholders) Creditors (bondholders) With high productivity, producers can raise revenues without having to raise prices (high growth with low inflation!) Labor Productivity Real GDP Labor Productivity = Real Output = Per Man-hour Y N Total Hours Real GDP (2004) $10,397 $8,317 = $34/hr $8,317 244.3 Subtract out Divide by total hrs Farm Output (Employment * Average Hrs * 52) Suppose that Output/hr in 1992 was equal to $28.hr, then Prod(1992) = 100 Prod(2003) = 100*(34/28) = 121.4 Multifactor Productivity Real GDP Labor productivity doesn’t correct for changes in the capital stock!! Capital Y = A KβN 1-β (Production function) MFP β = 1/3 Labor Capital Growth Growth Rate of MFP = y – βk – (1-β)n Real GDP Growth Labor Growth Multifactor Productivity Step 1: Estimate capital/labor share of income K = 30% N = 70% %A = 5 – (.3)*(3) + (.7)*(1) Step 2: Estimate capital, labor, and output growth %Y = 5% %K = 3% %N = 1% = 3.4% Productivity Growth in the US 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 1919- 1929- 1941- 1948- 1973- 1989- 19951929 1941 1948 1973 1989 2000 2000 Labor Productivity MFP Expectations & Multiple Equilibria Suppose a country is under a fixed regime with the understanding that they will switch to a float under “extreme” circumstances Further, assume that the country is currently in a strong economic position Expectations & Multiple Equilibria Case #1 Investors anticipate a devaluation Investors require a “risk premium” to compensate them for expected currency losses Higher interest rates choke off domestic investment The economy slips into a recession and devalues Case #2 Investors expect the peg to be maintained Interest rates remain low Domestic investment continues and the economy grows. No devaluation is required Multiple Equilibria In the previous example, there exist two possible equilibrium (one with a devaluation, and one without). The economy can then switch between the two. This switching is driven entirely by expectations. Contagion Contagion refers to the transmission of a currency crisis throughout a region The Thai Baht in 1997 was followed shortly by crises in Malaysia, Indonesia, Korea The Mexican Peso crisis in 1994 spread to Central and South America (“The Tequila Effect”) The Russian collapse (2000) was followed immediately by Brazil Reasons For Contagion Common Shocks Trade Linkages Common Creditors Financial Interdependencies Informational Problems and “Herding” behavior