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The Mexican Peso Crisis

Fai-Nan Perng
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Fai-Nan Perng: Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan)

Chapter 34 in Encyclopedia of Finance, 2022, pp 973-981 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract The Mexican Peso Crisis was the byproduct of various developments including large inflows of short-term foreign capital, prolonged current account deficit, and political instability. Between 1990 and 1993, investors in the United States were particularly eager to provide loans, many of them short-term, to the Mexican government and to Mexican corporations. Throughout this period, the share of foreign capital inflows exceeded the current account deficit. However, political instability and U.S. interest rate hikes soon changed the optimism for Mexico’s economic outlook. At the beginning of 1994, this did not affect the value of the peso, for Mexico was operating with a target zone exchange rate and its central bank stood ready to accept pesos and pay out dollars at the fixed rate. Yet Mexico’s reserves of foreign currency were too small to maintain its target zone exchange rate. When Mexico ran out of dollars at the end of 1994, the Mexican government announced a devaluation of the peso. As a result, investors avoided buying Mexican assets, adding to downward pressure on the peso. Overall, the Mexican meltdown of 1994–1995 had many facets. Yet couple of lessons are particularly clear: while foreign capital can make up for the shortfall in domestic saving, only long-term capital – in the forms of foreign direct investment or long-term debt – is conducive to domestic investment; large and abrupt movements of capital across national borders can cause excessive financial market volatility and undermine economic stability in the countries involved. Last and most importantly, prolonged current account deficit should be remedied by allowing the domestic currency to depreciate, promoting savings, or cutting back government expenditure rather than financed by foreign capital inflows. Countries with protracted current account deficits such as Argentina, the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, and Saudi Arabia, with Thailand in particular, should heed Mexico’s experience.

Keywords: Current account deficit; Foreign capital inflow; Foreign exchange reserves; Long-term debt; Short-term debt; Target zone exchange rate (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-030-91231-4_34

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-91231-4_34

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