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Keywords:exorbitant privilege OR Exorbitant privilege 

Speech
Panel remarks at the 7th High-Level Conference on the International Monetary System, Zürich, Switzerland, May 2016

Remarks at the 7th High-Level Conference on the International Monetary System, Zrich, Switzerland.
Speech , Paper 209

Working Paper
New Evidence on the US Excess Return on Foreign Portfolios

We provide new estimates of the return on US external claims and liabilities using confidential, high-quality, security-level data. The excess return is positive on average, since claims are tilted toward higher-return equities. The excess return is large and positive in normal times but large and negative during global crises, reflecting the global insurance role of the US external balance sheet. Controlling for issuer's nationality, we find that US investors have a larger exposure to equity issued by Asia-headquartered corporations than reported in the aggregate statistics. Finally, equity ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 1398

Discussion Paper
Dutch Treat: The Netherlands’ Exorbitant Privilege in the Eighteenth Century

The term “exorbitant privilege” emerged in the 1960s to describe the advantages derived by the U.S. economy from the dollar’s status as the de facto global reserve currency. In this post, we examine the exorbitant privilege that accrued to the Netherlands in the eighteenth century, when the Dutch guilder enjoyed global reserve currency status. We show how the private actions of financial institutions created and maintained this privilege, even in the absence of a central bank. While privilege benefited the Dutch financial system in many ways, it also laid the seeds of later financial ...
Liberty Street Economics , Paper 20251007

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