Working Paper

A cure worse than the disease? currency crises and the output costs of IMF-supported stabilization programs


Abstract: This paper investigates the output effects of IMF-supported stabilization programs, especially those introduced at the time of a severe balance of payments/currency crisis. Using a panel data set over the 19751997 period and covering 67 developing and emerging market economies (with 461 IMF stabilization programs and 160 currency crises), we find that currency criseseven after controlling for macroeconomic developments and political and regional factorssignificantly reduce output growth for one to two years. Output growth is also lower (0.7 percentage point annually) during IMF stabilization programs, but it appears that growth generally slows prior to implementation of the program. Moreover, programs coinciding with recent balance of payments or currency crises do not appear to further damage short-run growth prospects. Countries participating in IMF programs significantly reduce domestic credit growth, but no effect is found on budget policy. Applying this model to the collapse of output in East Asia following the 1997 crisis, we find that the unexpected (forecast error) collapse of output in Malaysiawhere an IMF program was not followedwas similar in magnitude to those countries adopting IMF programs (Indonesia, Korea, the Philippines, and Thailand).

Keywords: International Monetary Fund; Money; Financial crises;

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Bibliographic Information

Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Part of Series: Pacific Basin Working Paper Series

Publication Date: 2001

Number: 2001-02