External Shocks versus Domestic Policies in Emerging Markets
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
Espino, Emilio
Kozlowski, Julian
Martin, Fernando M.
Sánchez, Juan M.
Fecha:
2023Resumen
Debt crises in emerging markets have been linked to large fiscal deficits, high inflation rates, and large devaluations.
This article studies a sovereign default model with domestic fiscal and monetary policies to understand Argentina’s
experience during the 2000s commodity boom (2005–2017), following the default of 2001. The model suggests that
domestic policies played a critical role in Argentina’s poor economic performance. Despite exceptionally favorable
terms of trade, a rise in government spending led to higher taxation, inflation and currency depreciation, and lower
output. Economic performance would have been worse had Argentina followed a strict, rather than accommodative,
monetary policy without curbing its expansionary fiscal policy. Finally, limited access to international credit markets
during this episode did not appear to play a significant role.
Este artículo se encuentra publicado en Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, Second Quarter 2023, 105(2), pp. 108-21.