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dc.contributor.authorAsici, Ahmet
dc.contributor.authorWyplosz, Charles
dc.date.accessioned2011-10-27T09:07:01Z
dc.date.available2011-10-27T09:07:01Z
dc.date.issued2003
dc.identifier.citationAhmet Asici, Charles Wyplosz, 'The art of gracefully exiting a peg', Economic & Social Studies, 2003, pp211-228en
dc.identifier.issn0012-9984
dc.identifier.otherJEL E42
dc.identifier.otherJEL E52
dc.descriptionThis paper was delivered by Professor Charles Wyplosz as the Edgeworth Lecture at the Seventeenth Annual Conference of the Irish Economic Association, Limerick, April, 2003
dc.description.abstractThe wave of liberalisation of capital movements, which swept Europe in the 1980s and the emerging market countries in the 1990s, has given rise to the two-corner strategy. This strategy, expounded e.g. by Eichengreen (1994) and Fischer (2001), holds that only two exchange rate regimes are sustainable: hard pegs (currency boards, dollarisation) and fully flexible rates. Soft pegs in the middle, the traditional fixed but adjustable exchange rate regimes as well as all varieties of crawling bands, are seen as doomed, open to irresistible and unpredictable speculative attacks. While the predominance of the two corners remains open to the observation that most countries fear both extremes (see e.g. Levy-Yeyati and Sturzenegger, 2002), it remains true that an increasing number of countries have exited the soft middle ground, mostly towards the flexible end of the spectrum.en
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherEconomic & Social Studies
dc.relation.ispartofVol.34, No. 3, 2003
dc.sourceEconomic & Social Reviewen
dc.subjectExchange ratesen
dc.subjectMonetary policyen
dc.subjectPeggingen
dc.titleThe art of gracefully exiting a peg
dc.typeConference Paper
dc.typeJournal Article
dc.publisher.placeDublinen
dc.format.extentpaginationpp211-228
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2262/60361


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