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Fixed on Flexible: Rethinking Exchange Rate Regimes after the Great Recession

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Corsetti, Giancarlo  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8965-9853
Kuester, K 
Müller, GJ 

Abstract

© 2017 International Monetary Fund. The zero lower bound problem during the Great Recession has exposed the limits of monetary autonomy, prompting a re-evaluation of the relative benefits of currency pegs and monetary unions (see, e.g., Cook and Devereux in Journal of International Economics 101:52-69, 2016). We revisit this issue from the perspective of a small open economy. While a peg can be beneficial when the recession originates domestically, we show that a float dominates in the face of deflationary demand shocks abroad. When the rest of the world is in a liquidity trap, the domestic currency depreciates in nominal and real terms even in the absence of domestic monetary stimulus (if domestic rates are also at the zero lower bound) - enhancing the country's competitiveness and insulating to some extent the domestic economy from foreign deflationary pressure.

Description

Keywords

38 Economics, 3801 Applied Economics, 3802 Econometrics, 3803 Economic Theory

Journal Title

IMF Economic Review

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-4161
2041-417X

Volume Title

65

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Rights

All rights reserved