A Model of Contagious Currency Crises with Application to Argentina

This paper proposes a model of contagious currency crises: crises transmit across countries by raising the risk premium on government bonds. Three types of equilibria can occur: a "no-collapse" equilibrium (crises never transmit from abroad); a "collapse" equilibrium (crises are inevitably contagious); or a "fundamentals" equilibrium (crises are contagious if domestic fundamentals are weak). A calibration exercise finds that the 1995 turmoil in Argentina coexisted with a combination of risk-averse investors and weak credibility in the currency board arrangement. This turmoil could only be attributed to a Tequila effect from the Mexican crisis alone if investors were excessively risk-averse.
Publication date: March 1999
ISBN: 9781451844788
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Money and Monetary Policy , Money and Monetary Policy , WP , exchange rate , Argentina , contagion , multiple equilibria , risk aversion , fixed exchange rate system , degree of risk aversion , Argentina's economy , exchange rate crisis , contagion effect , crisis in Mexico , exchange rate peg , investors' degr

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