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Assessing Financial Vulnerability: An Early Warning System for Emerging Markets

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E-Book Version

"I am convinced that it will contribute to develop an early warning system needed so much to avoid severe emerging markets crises in the future."

Dr. Rolf E. Breuer
Deutsche Bank

"(Provides) a definitive presentation of the 'early warning indicator' methodology for crisis prediction ... Without a doubt, this is a book that I would want to have on my shelves."

Peter Montiel
International Monetary Fund

"... the best available effort to build an 'early warning system'."

Barry Eichengreen
University of California, Berkeley

"... a well-written and innovative treatment of an important topic and should be of great interest to both practitioners and academics."

Holger Wolf
Georgetown University


Assessing Financial Vulnerability: An Early Warning System for Emerging Markets

by Morris Goldstein ,
Graciela Kaminsky and
Carmen Reinhart


June 2000 • 150 pp. ISBN paper 0-88132-237-7 | 978-0-88132-237-8 • $10.00

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The European currency crises of 1992-93, the Mexican crisis of 1994-95, and especially the Asian/global crisis of 1997-98, have all contributed to a heightened interest in the early warning signals of financial crises. This pathbreaking study presents a comprehensive battery of empirical tests on the performance of alternative early warning indicators for emerging-market economies that should prove useful in the construction of a more effective global warning system.

Not only are the authors able to draw conclusions about which specific indicators have sent the most reliable early warning signals of currency and banking crises in emerging economies, they also test the out-of-sample performance of the model during the Asian crisis and find that it does a good job of identifying the most vulnerable economies. In addition, they show how the early warning system can be used to construct a "composite" crisis indicator to weigh the importance of alternative channels of cross-country "contagion" of crises, and to generate information about the recovery path from crises.

This timely study comes on the eve of impending changes at the International Monetary Fund as that institution reexamines how it reacts to financial crises. Moreover, the study provides "... a wealth of valuable elements for anyone investigating and forecasting adverse developments in emerging markets as well as industrial countries," according to Ewoud Schuitemaker, vice president of the economics department at ABN AMRO Bank.

Contents


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Preface

Acknowledgments

1. Introduction 154.2KB

2. Methodology 250.0KB

3. Empirical Results 184.3KB

4. Rating the Rating Agencies 168.9KB

5. An Assessment of Vulnerability 213.5KB

6. Contagion 173.6KB

7. The Aftermath of Crisis 146.1KB

8. Summary of Results and Concluding Remarks 164.0KB

Appendix: Data and Definitions 118.6KB

References

Index