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Financial dollarization: evaluating the consequences

A simple model of monetary policy and currency crises

Eduardo Levy Yeyati

Economic Policy, 2006, vol. 21, issue 45, 62-118

Abstract: The presence in residents’ portfolio of foreign-currency assets and liabilities (or ‘financial dollarization’) has been alleged to influence monetary policy in developing economies and, especially, to cause debtors’ insolvency in the aftermath exchange rate depreciations (the ‘balance sheet effect’). The abundant and influential literature on these implications, however, contrasts sharply with the scarcity of empirical work aimed at confirming or refuting them. Using a new database, this paper assesses the evidence on the determinants of financial dollarization and tests whether its empirical effects on monetary and financial stability and on economic performance are consistent with theoretical predictions. It finds that financially dollarized economies display a more unstable demand for money, a greater propensity to suffer banking crises after a depreciation of the local currency, and slower and more volatile output growth, without significant gains in terms of domestic financial depth. The results indicate that active de-dollarization policies may be advisable for the many economies, including Central and Eastern European ones, where foreign-currency denominated assets and liabilities are important in residents’ financial portfolios.— Eduardo Levy Yeyati

Date: 2006
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Working Paper: Financial Dollarisation: Evaluating The Consequences (2005) Downloads
Working Paper: FINANCIAL DOLLARIZATION: Evaluating the consequences (2004) Downloads
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