2005
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.981334
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Say You Fix, Enjoy and Relax: The Deleterious Effect of Peg Announcements on Fiscal Discipline

Abstract: This paper explores the impact of actual exchange rate regimes on fiscal discipline, which we purportedly link to the effect of announcing the peg and to the availability of external funds. To stress this point, the focus of the analysis is emerging markets spanning from the beginning of the nineties, given the importance of financial integration in the last fifteen years and the centrality of external financing for these countries. We empirically show that announcing the pegs has deleterious effects on fiscal… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…First, we consider the de facto Levy Yeyati and Sturzenegger (2005) classification for those ERRs operating under unified rates. Therefore, distinguishing between what countries claim to do (i.e., announcement) and what they actually do clearly matters when analyzing the influence of ERRs on diverse macroeconomic variables, including the primary fiscal balance (Alberola and Molina 2004;Alberola, Molina, and Navia 2005). Dual regimes are still associated with higher fiscal deficits than either regime operating under unified rates.…”
Section: A Benchmark Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…First, we consider the de facto Levy Yeyati and Sturzenegger (2005) classification for those ERRs operating under unified rates. Therefore, distinguishing between what countries claim to do (i.e., announcement) and what they actually do clearly matters when analyzing the influence of ERRs on diverse macroeconomic variables, including the primary fiscal balance (Alberola and Molina 2004;Alberola, Molina, and Navia 2005). Dual regimes are still associated with higher fiscal deficits than either regime operating under unified rates.…”
Section: A Benchmark Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following the empirical literature, we examine the effects of alternative exchange rate regimes on the fiscal deficit treating all regressors as exogenous Velasco 1998, 2000;Fatás and Rose 2001;Alberola and Molina 2004;Alberola, Molina, and Navia 2005). Column 1 of Table 1 shows the unconditional effect in a dynamic model.…”
Section: A Benchmark Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, the transformation of the model in the first differences, as performed for the Arellano–Bond estimator, might, in some situations, lead to flawed estimates, as will be shown in Section . Two recent papers attempt to test several possible counteracting effects of pegged exchange rates on fiscal discipline explicitly (Alberola and Molina, ; Alberola et al ., ). While this is an interesting approach, the results are dubious due to several methodological problems.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 97%