“…11 From a contractual point of view, the reason why non-tradable goods enter as collateral is that foreigners can seize them from a defaulting borrower and sell them in the domestic market in exchange for tradable goods. The literature has extensively used this formulation of the credit constraint in models of reserve accumulation (Durdu et al, 2009;Arce et al, 2019), macroprudential policy (Bianchi, 2011), real-exchange-rate stabilization policies (Benigno et al, 2013), ex-post intervention with industrial policy (Hernandez and Mendoza, 2017), self-fulfilling crises (Schmitt-Grohé and Uribe, 2018), noisy news and regime-switching shocks (Bianchi et al, 2016), trend shocks (Flemming et al, 2019;Seoane and Yurdagul, 2019), imperfect enforcement in capital-flow management policies (Bengui and Bianchi, 2018), models with banks intermediating capital inflows in T units to fund domestic loans in units of the domestic CPI (Mendoza and Rojas, 2019), and models of exchange-rate policy with nominal rigidities and credit frictions (Ottonello, 2015;Coulibaly, 2018;Farhi and Werning, 2016).…”