East Asian Financial Crises

rsumeet

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Fundamental Macroeconomic Causes:
The East Asian Currency Crisis
 Savings-investment imbalance--also reflected as current account imbalance
 Dependence on short-term foreign capital (portfolio investment both equity and debt instruments--and loans) by private investors
 Equity is better than debt
 Direct investment is better than portfolio investment
 Insolvency caused by the revaluation of foreign-currency denominated debts and the rise in the rate of interest
 Domino effects of insolvency and bankruptcy
 Problems magnified by high leverage (or high debt to equity ratio)
 Inadequacy of foreign exchange reserves (working capital of a country) for supporting imports, debt service, and (potential) net short-term capital outflows\
 Real exchange rate appreciation (loss of competitiveness) due to a domestic rate of inflation higher than the U.S. rate of inflation


Fundamental Microeconomic Causes:
Borrowing Too Much, Short-Term and in Wrong Currency
 Maturity mismatch--borrowing short and investing (lending) long
 Currency mismatch--revenue and cost (liability) in different currencies
 Vulnerability magnified by high debt to equity ratio
 Insolvency caused directly or indirectly by declines in the exchange rates
 Oversold currencies create unnecessary bankruptcies and discourage recapitalization and re-structuring
 Moral hazard on the parts of both lenders and borrowers
 Past bailouts (Latin American loans, Mexican loans) of developed country lenders encourage moral hazard on the part of lenders
 Implicit guarantee of banks and enterprises “too big to fail” by governments encourage moral hazard on the part of borrowers
 “Herd mentality”--too much money chasing too few good projects leading to mis-pricing by developed country investors and lenders (it is better to make the same mistake as everyone else)
 
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