Sula, Ozan (2006): Surges and Sudden Stops of Capital Flows to Emerging Markets.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_383.pdf Download (271kB) | Preview |
Abstract
A characteristic of many of the recent emerging market currency crises is a preceding surge in capital inflows and their reversals or ‘sudden stops’ during the crises. The empirical investigation of 38 emerging market economies between 1990 and 2003 reveals that a surge in capital inflows significantly increases the probability of a sudden stop. In addition, a surge accompanied by a high current account deficit or an appreciated real exchange rate is more likely to be associated with a sudden stop. The paper also finds that a surge that is dominated by private loans and portfolio flows rather than direct investment has a higher probability to end with a sudden stop.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Surges and Sudden Stops of Capital Flows to Emerging Markets |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Capital flows; Sudden stops; Surges in capital flows; Emerging Markets; private loans; portfolio flows; foreign direct investment |
Subjects: | F - International Economics > F3 - International Finance > F32 - Current Account Adjustment ; Short-Term Capital Movements F - International Economics > F4 - Macroeconomic Aspects of International Trade and Finance > F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics |
Item ID: | 383 |
Depositing User: | Ozan Sula |
Date Deposited: | 11 Oct 2006 |
Last Modified: | 28 Sep 2019 15:04 |
References: | References Abiad, A., 2003. Early-Warning Systems: A Survey and and a Regime-Switching Approach. IMF Working Paper No.03/32. International Monetary Fund. Ai, C., Norton, E.C., 2003. Interaction Terms in Logit and Probit Models. Economics Letters 80, (1), 123--129. Aziz, J., Caramazza, F., Salgado, R., 2000. Currency Crises: In Search of Common Elements. IMF Working Paper No.00/67. International Monetary Fund. Bacchetta, P., Vincoop, E.V., 1998. Capital Flows to Emerging Markets: Liberalization, Overshooting, and Volatility. NBER Working Paper No. 6530. Bailey, M.N., Farrell, D., Lund, S., 2000. The Color of Hot Money. Foreign Affairs (March/April), 99--109. Bikhchandani, S., Sharma, S., 2000. Herd Behavior in Financial Markets-A Review. IMF Working Paper No.00/48. Bird, G., Rajan, R.S., 2002. Does FDI Guarantee the Stability of International Capital Flows? Evidence from Malaysia. Development Policy Review 20, 191--202. Calvo, G., 1998. Capital Flows and Capital-Market Crises: The Simple Economics of Sudden Stops. Journal of Applied Economics 1, (November), 35--54. Calvo, G., 2000. Balance-of-Payments Crises in Emerging Markets: Large Capital Inflows and Sovereign Governments, in: Krugman, P. (Ed.), Currency Crises, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, Calvo, G., Izquierdo, A., Mejia, L.-F. , 2004. On the Empirics of Sudden Stops: The Relevance of Balance-sheet Effects. NBER Working Paper No.10520. Calvo, G., Mendoza, E.G., 2000. Rational Contagion and the Globalization of Securities Markets. Journal of International Economics 51, 79--113. Cavallo, E.A., Frankel, J.A., 2004. Does Openness to Trade Make Countries More Vulnerable to Sudden Stops, Or Less? Using Gravity to Establish Causality. NBER Working Paper No.10957. Chuhan, P., Perez-Quiros, G., Popper, H., 1996. International Capital Flows: Do Short-term Investment and Direct Investment Differ? Policy Research Working Paper No.1507. The World Bank. Claessens, S., Dooley, M.P., Warner, A., 1995. Portfolio Capital Flows: Hot or Cold? The World Economic Review 9, 153--174. Corsetti, G., Pesenti, P., Roubini, N., 1999. Paper tigers? A Model of the Asian crisis. European Economic Review 43, (7), 1211--1236. Edwards, S., 1998. Capital Flows, Real Exchange Rates, and Capital Controls: Some Latin American Experiences. NBER Working Paper No.6800. Edwards, S., 2005. Capital Controls, Sudden Stops and Current Account Reversals. NBER Working Paper No.11170. Fischer, S., 2001. Exchange Rate Regimes: Is the Bipolar View Correct? Journal of Economic Perspectives 15, (2), 3--24. Frankel, J.A., Rose, A.K., 1996. Currency Crashes in Emerging Markets: An Empirical Treatment. Journal of International Economics 41, (3-4), 351--366. Gabriele, A., K., B., A., P., 2000. Instability and Volatility of Capital Flows to Developing Countries. World Economy 23, 1031--1056. Griffith-Jones, S., 1998. Global Capital Flows: Should They be Regulated? Palgrave Macmillan, London, UK. Guttentag, J., Herring, R., 1984. Credit Rationing and Financial Disorder. Journal of Finance 39, (5), 1359--1382. Hutchison, M., Noy, I., 2006. Sudden Stops and the Mexican Wave: Currency Crises, Capital Flow Reversals and Output Loss in Emerging Markets. Journal of Development Economics 79, (1), 225--248. Kamin, S.B., Schindler, J.W., Samuel, S.L., 2001. The Contributions of Domestic and External Factors to Emerging Market Devaluation Crises: An Early Warning Systems Approach. International Finance Discussion Paper No.711. Board of Governers of the Federal Reseve System. Kaminsky, G.L., 2004. Volatile International Capital Flows: A Blessing or a Curse? Devue d'Economie du Développement 34, (December), 83--119. Kaminsky, G.L., Lizondo, S., Reinhart, C., 1998. Leading Indicators of Currency Crises. IMF Staff Papers 45, No.1. Kaminsky, G.L., Reinhart, C., Vegh, C.A., 2003. The Unholy Trinity of Financial Contagion. Journal of Economic Perspectives 17, (4), 51--74. Krugman, P., 1998. What Happened to Asia? Vol. Mimeo. MIT, Kumar, M., Moorthy, U., Perraudin, W., 2002. Predicting Emerging Market Currency Crashes. IMF Working Paper No.02/07. International Monetary Fund. Obstfeld, M., 1984. The Logic of Currency Crises. Cahiers Economiques et Monetaires 43, 311--325. Osband, K., Van Rijckeghem, C., 1998. Vulnerability to Currency Crises. IMF Staff Papers 47, No.2. 238--258. Radelet, S., Sachs, J., 1998. The East Asian Financial Crisis: Diagnosis, Remedies, Prospects. Brookings Paper of Economic Activity 1, 1--90. Rodrik, D., Velasco, A., 1999. Short-Term Capital Flows. NBER Working Paper No.7364. Sachs, J., Tornell, A., Velasco, A., 1996. Financial Crises in Emerging Markets: The Lessons from 1995. Brookings Paper of Economic Activity 1, 147--212. Sarno, L., Taylor, M.P., 1999. Hot Money, Accounting Labels and the Permanence of Capital Flows to Developing Countries: An Empirical Investigation. Journal of Development Economics 59, (2), 337--364. Willett, T.D., 2000. International Financial Markets as Sources of Crises or Discipline: The Too Much, Too Late Hypothesis. Princeton Essays in International Finance 218, Willett, T.D., Denzau, A., Ramos, C., Thomas, J., Jo, G.-J. , 2004. The Falsification of Four Popular Hypothesis about International Financial Behavior during Asian Crises. The World Economy 27, 25--44. Williamson, J., 2001. Issues Regarding the Composition of Capital Flows. Development Policy Review 19, (1), 11--29. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/383 |