Brazilian Journal of Political Economy (Jan 2007)

National exchange rate policies and international debt crises: how Brazil did not follow Argentina into a default in 2001-2002

  • Bryan Andrew Kenyon Johnson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-31572007000100004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1
pp. 60 – 81

Abstract

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This paper examines how exchange rate policies and IMF Stand-By Arrangements affect debt crises using econometrics and a comparison between Argentina and Brazil. It refines an existing diagram outlining crisis development to propose crisis prevention strategies. Flexible exchange rate policies reduce a country's probability of default by over 4%, but Stand-By Arrangements increase it by an inconsequential percentage. Unlike Argentina, Brazil avoided a default via a freely-floating exchange rate system, fiscal deficit reduction, and a cooperative and coordinated relationship with the IMF. The results provide policymakers from developing countries with lessons to manage their countries' default risks more effectively.

Keywords