Volume 12, Issue 4 December 2016

What Is Learned from a Currency Crisis, Fear of Floating, or Hollow Middle? Identifying Exchange Rate Policy in Crisis Countries

Abstract

This paper develops a new methodology to infer the de facto exchange rate regime, based on a structural VAR model with sign restrictions. The methodology is applied to data from eleven emerging markets that experienced a currency crisis. The main findings are as follows: (i) to be consistent with the "hollow middle" hypothesis, many countries moved toward hard pegs, such as dollarization and a currency board, or more flexible exchange rate arrangements that are close to the free float in the post-crisis period; and (ii) the cases where a country overstates its exchange rate flexibility (including the case of "fear of floating") are found in all samples, but such cases tend to be less frequently found in the post-crisis period than in the pre-crisis period.

Authors

  • Soyoung Kim

JEL codes

  • F33
  • E52
  • F31
  • C32

Other papers in this issue

Mark Carlson and Burcu Duygan-Bump and Fabio Natalucci and Bill Nelson and Marcelo Ochoa and Jeremy Stein and Skander Van den Heuvel

John Bagnall and David Bounie and Kim P. Huynh and Anneke Kosse and Tobias Schmidt and Scott Schuh and Helmut Stix

Stephen Quinn and William Roberds

Antoine Martin and James McAndrews and David Skeie