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Title: Contractionary Currency Crashes In Developing Countries


1
Contractionary Currency CrashesIn Developing
Countries
  • Mundell-Fleming Lecture, Nov. 5, 2004Fifth IMF
    Annual Research Conference.Forthcoming, IMF
    Staff Papers, 2005.
  • IMF Institute, May 27, 2005.
  • Jeffrey A. FrankelHarpel Professor
  • KSG, Harvard University

2
Why are devaluations so costly?
  • Political costs
  • Economic costs
  • If the answer is contractionary effects of
    devaluation,
  • what is the mechanism?
  • And what can a country do to minimize them?

3
After a devaluation, leaders lose their jobs
  • Twice as often within 1 yr. (30)
  • as in control group (14) in 1960s.
  • R.Cooper, 1971. (Criterion is 10 deval.)
  • Updated to 1970-2003,
  • within 12 mo.s of devaluation (27), vs,
    otherwise (21)
  • within 6 mo.s (19), vs. as otherwise (12).
  • Difference is statistically significant at 0.5
    level
  • (Criterion is 25 deval, incl. 10 acceleration.)

4
Premier 2/3 more likely to lose his job within 6
mos. of currency crash
1970-2003 Within 6 mos. Of devaluation Other periods
Change in premier 36 (19.1) 812 (11.6)
No change in premier 153 (81.0) 6192 (88.4)
Total cases 189 7004
5
Fin.min.s / governors are even more likely to
lose office in yr.
6
Political price of devaluations in developing
countries
7
Citations (1972-2003)
  • Of Cooper (1971) 84
  • Of Mundell (1963) 319
  • Of Fleming (1962) 257

8
Possible reasons currency crashes correlate with
change of leadership
  • Elections cause devaluations, rather than the
    other way around (tho our timing is post-deval.)
  • Devaluation as proxy for unpopular IMF austerity
    programs
  • The government is perceived as having broken a
    promise
  • High economic costs associated with devaluations.

9
Conditioning on IMF program does not affect
leader turnover
  • Dummy variable defined for initiation of IMF
    program within 3 months of currency crash
  • does not raise frequency of leader job loss,
    relative to other devaluations.
  • Thus conditioning on the IMF dummy variable has
    no discernible effect on frequency of leader job
    loss within 6 mo.s
  • 21.1 with an IMF program, vs.
  • 21.9 without.
  • Both similar to overall rate of job turnover
  • following devaluations (22.8) in full sample --
  • still almost double the 11.6 rate in normal
    times.

10
Executives twice as likely to lose their jobs if
the government had said no devaluation.
Leader was changed within 12 mos unchanged within 12 mos Frequency of changes
Of 6 promises (whether by premier, fin min, or CB) 4 2 2/3
Of 15 with no prior promises not to devalue 5 10 1/3
Total 21 case studies 9 12
11
Executives gt twice as likely lose their jobs if
the government had said no devaluation.
Leader was Changed within 6 mo.s Unchanged within 6 mo.s Frequency of changes
Of 6 promises (whether by premier, fin min, or CB) 3 3 .5
Of 15 with no prior promises not to devalue 3 12 .2
Total 21 case studies 6 15
12
Narrowing down source of political costs of
devaluation
  • As noted, IMF programs make no difference.
  • Even in those cases where no assurances had been
    given over preceding month, rate of job loss
    (20) still gt no devaluation cases (11.6)
  • (or 33 at 12-month horizon gt 20.5) .
  • Thus, although broken promise effect is there,
    political costs must also reflect economic pain.

13
Why did output fall sharply in many recent crises?
  • Excessive expenditure-reduction (Sachs
    Stiglitz)?
  • Excessive fiscal contraction
  • Excessive monetary contraction (high i gt
    default)
  • Versus what alternative?
  • More expenditure-switching instead?
  • Devaluations were very large as it was.
  • Magical relaxation of external finance
    constraint?
  • Who pays?
  • Doesnt change the graph
  • But if devaluations are contractionary,
  • internal balance line slopes the other way
  • New intersection is hard to find
  • May lose output regardless the policy mix.

14
Textbook model right combination of i E
should attain new adverse external finance
constraint, without recession
15
1990s version External balance line slopes down,
like internal balance line
16
Possible contractionary effects of devaluation
  • Some require rapid passthrough, from exchange
    rate to prices of either
  • imported inputs
  • consumer imports, so W
  • All TGs, so the distribution of income
  • CPI, so M/CPI
  • Other effects do not need passthrough
  • Balance sheet effect

17
The passthrough coefficient has fallen in
developing countries.
  • Slow/incomplete passthrough of exchange rate
    changes has long been a property of US market
    other large rich countries.
  • After large devaluations in Asia and other
    emerging market countries from 1994 (Mexico) to
    2001 (Argentina), most observers feared
    correspondingly large rises in local currency
    prices.
  • It never happened.

18
Passthrough is greatest for prices of imports at
dock, but less for retail and CPISource
Frankel, Parsley Wei (2004) effect within one
year
19
Passthrough for less developed countries gt for
rich, historically. Source Frankel, Parsley
Wei (2004) effect within one year
20
Passthrough to prices of 8 narrow imported
products
  • Coefficient initially higher for developing
    countries (.8) than rich (.3), in 1990
  • Downward trend in coefficient during decade
  • Significant, regardless of income level
  • Twice as fast for developing countries as for
    rich
  • Partly explained, for rich, by rising real wages
  • Speed of adjustment (ECM)
  • Initially higher for developing countries than
    rich
  • Significant downward trend for developing c.s
    (only)

21
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22
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23
Balance sheet effect is most important of the
contractionary devaluation effects
  • Analytical literature on balance sheet effect
    includes
  • Kiyotaki Moore (1997), Krugman (1999), Aghion,
    Banerjee Bacchetta (2000), Cespedes, Chang
    Velasco (2000, 2003), Chang Velasco (1999),
    Caballero and Krishnamurty (2002), Christiano,
    Gust Roldos (2002), Dornbusch (2001), Mendoza
    (2002), Calvo, Izquierdo, Talvi (2003), Cavallo
    (2004), Eichengreen Hausmann (1999) and many
    others.
  • Empirical evidence of its output cost includes
  • Cavallo, Kisselev, Perri and Roubini (2002)
  • Guidotti, Sturzenneger and Villar (2003)

24
Foreign-denominated debt in crises x real
devaluation gt Output loss Source M.Cavallo,
K.Kisselev, F.Perri, N.Roubini, 2002.
25
Some suggested influences on the balance sheet
effect
  • Eichengreen Hausmann (1999) made the structural
    inability to borrow in local currencies famous
    under the name original sin.
  • Is it historical fate?
  • Some argue that the culprit is adjustable pegs.
  • Short run During the procrastination phase,
    composition of debt typically shifts to .
  • Medium run Trade openness affects vulnerability
    to currency crashes.

26
Procrastination phase period after reserves
peak, but before the speculative attack
  • Typically lasts 6-13 mo.s Frankel Wei (WB,
    2005)
  • E.g., Mexico, 1994
  • Four ways to gamble for resurrection
  • Officials announce wont devalue
  • Run down reserves
  • Shift composition of debt to short-term
  • Shift composition to -denominated
  • Each ploy may gain time, but raises cost if
    devaluation comes.

27
Exhaustion of Mexicos ReservesUp to December
1994 Crisis Data source IMF International
Financial Statistics.
28
Mexicos shift to -linked debt, in 1992-94
Data source Mexican Ministry of Finance and
Public Credit.
29
Mexicos shift to short-term debt in 1992-94
Data source Mexican Ministry of Finance and
Public Credit.
30
Lesson
  • After inflows cease, adjust to new external
    balance early
  • while it is still possible to maintain internal
    balance
  • Rather than procrastinating by running down
    reserves shifting to s.t. debt.
  • Because after the crash, any combination of high
    i devaluation may be contractionary.

31
In long run, how does openness to trade affect a
countrys vulnerability?
  • Some say openness raises vulnerability to sudden
    stops
  • Vulnerability to real shocks, financial shocks
    loss of trade credit
  • Empirical support
  • Milesi-Ferretti Razin (1998, 2000)
  • Others say it reduces vulnerability
  • Sachs (1985) explains Asian resilience, vs.
    Latin America
  • Trade is a hostage that reassures creditors
  • Eaton Gersovitz (1981), Rose (2002)
  • If m is lower, cost of adjustment to given
    cut-off is higher
  • measured by necessary expenditure-reduction at
    given prices
  • or by necessary devaluation (with corresponding
    contractionary effects)
  • Argentina is favorite example of toxic
    interaction of low trade/GDP and balance sheet
    effect
  • Guidotti, Sturzenegger Villar, (2003), Calvo
    Talvi (2004), Desai Mitra (2004), Cavallo
    (2004), and Secy. Paul ONeill.
  • Empirical support
  • Calvo, Izquierdo Mejia (2003) Edwards
    (2004a,b)

32
Countries of currency crashes tend to be less
open to trade, especially those with sudden stops
as well
33
Countries that are less open to trade are more
prone to sudden stops currency crashes
34
Endogeneity of trade/GDP
  • Possible channels of endogeneity of openness
  • Via income richer countries tend to liberalize
  • Part of a more general reform strategy driven by
    pro-globalization philosophy or Washington
    Consensus forces.
  • Experience with crises -- the dependent variable
    -- may itself cause liberalization, via an IMF
    program.
  • Feedbacks betw. trade financial openness.
    Aizenman (2003)
  • Solution Use gravity as IV for trade
  • Does Openness to Trade Make Countries More
    Vulnerable to Sudden Stops, Or Less? Using
    Gravity to Establish Causality Cavallo
    Frankel (2004)

35
Predicting sudden stops, while treating
endogeneity of tradeSource Cavallo Frankel
(2004)
Ordinary probit IV (gravity)
Trade openness -0.53 (0.259) -2.45 (0.813)
Foreign Debt/GDP t-1 -0.080 (0.217) 0.196 (0.275)
Liability Dollarization t-1 (0.316 (0.195) 0.591 (0.256)
CA/GDP t-1 -4.068 (1.297) -7.386 (2.06)
observations 778 1062
36
Predicting currency crashes, while treating
endogeneity of tradeSource Cavallo Frankel
(2004)
Ordinary probit IV (gravity)
Trade openness -0.37 (0.21) -0.97 (0.59)
Foreign Debt/GDP t-1 0.35 (0.18) 0.57 (0.23)
Liability Dollarizationt-1 0.04 (0.20) -0.11 (0.18)
observations 798 1196
37
S Stops crashes rise also when it is
gravity-fitted openness that is low
38
Conclusion
  • An increase in trade openness of 10 percentage
    points decreases likelihood of a sudden stop
    (definition of Calvo, et al.) by approximately
    32.
  • E.g., moving from Argentinas trade share (.2) to
    Australias (.3)
  • CA/GDP is the other strongest predictor
  • Increase in openness also decreases the
    likelihood of currency crash, defined as 25
    increase in exchange market pressure (exchange
    rate reserves)
  • Foreign debt/GDP or Reserves/imports become the
    other strong predictors
  • Also some evidence that openness reduces the
    output cost associated with crises

39
Take-aways
  • Leaders are twice as likely to lose office after
    a devaluation.
  • Passthrough has declined sharply.
  • To minimize contractionary effects of
    devaluation, countries should
  • avoid weakening of their balance sheets during
    procrastination phase of debt cycle
  • in the long term, open to trade.

40
The highway analogy
  • Superhighways are useful, get you where you want
    to go quicker. But accidents at high speeds are
    more likely fatal. -- Merton
  • Sudden stops
  • Its not the speed that kills, its the sudden
    stops Dornbusch
  • ? sharp disappearance of private capital
    inflows, reflected (esp. at 1st) in reserve
    declines, (soon) in disappearance of previously
    large CA deficit - Calvo
  • Superhighways Modern financial markets get you
    where you want to go fast, but accidents are
    bigger, and so more care is required. -- Merton
  • Is it the road or the driver? Even when
    multiple countries have accidents in the same
    stretch of road, their own policies are also
    important determinants its not just the fault
    of the system. Summers
  • Contagion is also a contributor to multi-car
    accidents.

41
Highway analogy, continued
  • Moral hazard -- G7/IMF bailouts reduce impact of
    given crisis
  • in the LR undermine the incentive for investors
    borrowers to be careful. Like air bags and
    ambulances.
  • But to claim that moral hazard means we should
    abolish the IMF would be like claiming that
    drivers would be safer with a spike in the center
    of the steering wheel column Mussa.
  • Optimal sequence Highway off-ramp should not
    dump high-speed traffic into center of a village
    before streets are paved, intersections
    regulated, pedestrians learn to walk on
    sidewalks. So a country with a primitive
    domestic financial system perhaps should not open
    to the full force of international capital flows
    before domestic reforms prudential regulation.
  • Slowing down There may be a role for controls on
    capital inflow (speed bumps posted limits).
  • Reaction time How driver reacts in short
    interval between appearance of hazard and moment
    of impact (speculative attack) influences
    outcome. Adjust, rather than procrastinate by
    using up reserves switching to short-term
    debt JF
  • Routine defensive driving Keeping high reserves
    and an economy open to trade is like leaving
    ample following-distance.
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