Affiliation:
1. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, United States
2. École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract
Abstract
This article shows that the inability to use monetary policy for macroeconomic stabilization leaves a government more vulnerable to a rollover crisis. We study a sovereign default model with self-fulfilling rollover crises, foreign currency debt, and nominal rigidities. When the government lacks monetary independence, lenders anticipate that the government would face a severe recession in the event of a liquidity crisis and are therefore more prone to run on government bonds. In a quantitative application to the Eurozone debt crisis, we find that the lack of monetary autonomy played a central role in making Spain vulnerable to a rollover crisis. Finally, we argue that a lender of last resort can go a long way toward reducing the costs of giving up monetary independence.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics
Reference70 articles.
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3. “Coordination and Crisis in Monetary Unions,”;Aguiar;Quarterly Journal of Economics,2015
4. “Quantitative Models of Sovereign Debt Crises,”;Aguiar,2016
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