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Hot Money

Staff Report 228 | Published March 1, 2003

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Authors

Patrick J. Kehoe Monetary Advisor
V. V. Chari Consultant
Hot Money

Abstract

Recent empirical work on financial crises documents that crises tend to occur when macroeconomic fundamentals are weak, but that even after conditioning on an exhaustive list of fundamentals, a sizable random component to crises and associated capital flows remains. We develop a model of herd behavior consistent with these observations. Informational frictions together with standard debt default problems lead to volatile capital flows resembling hot money and financial crises. We show that repaying debt during difficult times identifies a government as financially resilient, enhances its reputation and stabilizes capital flows. Bailing out governments deprives resilient countries of this opportunity.




Published in: _Journal of Political Economy_ (Vol. 111, No. 6, December 2003, pp. 1262-1292) https://doi.org/10.1086/378525.