Living and Dying with Hard Pegs : The Rise and Fall of Argentina's Currency Board
The rise and fall of Argentina's currency board shows the extent to which the advantages of hard pegs have been overstated. The currency board did provide nominal stability and boosted financial intermediation, at the cost of endogenous financ...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/03/2166846/living-dying-hard-pegs-rise-fall-argentinas-currency-board http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19040 |
Summary: | The rise and fall of Argentina's
currency board shows the extent to which the advantages of
hard pegs have been overstated. The currency board did
provide nominal stability and boosted financial
intermediation, at the cost of endogenous financial
dollarization, but did not foster monetary or fiscal
discipline. The failure to adequately address the
currency-growth-debt trap into which Argentina fell at the
end of the 1990s precipitated a run on the currency and the
banks, followed by the abandonment of the currency board and
a sovereign debt default. The crisis can be best interpreted
as a bad outcome of a high-stakes strategy to overcome a
weak currency problem. To increase the credibility of the
hard peg, the government raised its exit costs, which
deepened the crisis once exit could no longer be avoided.
But some alternative exit strategies would have been less
destructive than the one adopted. |
---|