ERWP 2003
DOI: 10.24148/wp2004-32
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Country Spreads and Emerging Countries: Who Drives Whom?

Abstract: A number of studies have stressed the role of movements in US interest rates and country spreads in driving business cycles in emerging market economies. At the same time, country spreads have been found to respond to changes in both the US interest rate and domestic conditions in emerging markets. These intricate interrelationships leave open a number of fundamental questions: Do country spreads drive business cycles in emerging countries or vice versa, or both? Do US interest rates affect emerging countries … Show more

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Cited by 296 publications
(454 citation statements)
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“…The magnitude and sign of the effect of U.S. news, however, crucially depend on the state of the U.S. economy. illustrate that in response to an increase in U.S. interest rates, emerging country spreads first fall and then display a delayed but large overshooting pattern.…”
Section: Related Literature and Our Contributionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The magnitude and sign of the effect of U.S. news, however, crucially depend on the state of the U.S. economy. illustrate that in response to an increase in U.S. interest rates, emerging country spreads first fall and then display a delayed but large overshooting pattern.…”
Section: Related Literature and Our Contributionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Figure shows the impulse response to a positive world interest rate shock Rt to the small open economy. The recent literature shows that world interest rate shock may explain a nonnegligible fraction of emerging economies' business cycles (see, e.g., Neumeyer and Perri , Uríbe and Yue ). A rise in the world interest rate increases the cost of borrowing for both domestic and MNC‐owned firms, leading to capital outflows and a fall in investment.…”
Section: Model Propertiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While parameterizing R, I follow Uribe and Yue () and obtain dollar‐denominated country interest rates by adding EMBI+ risk premium spreads over the U.S. real interest rate. The former is available for the period 1996:Q2–2014:Q3, whereas the latter is obtained from the World Development Indicators data set published by the World Bank for the corresponding period.…”
Section: Quantitative Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%