Thursday, May 10, 2012
How the Latin Triangle Swallowed the Euro
Back in 1996, Rudiger Dornbusch wrote a paper about the political economy of exchange rates in Latin America. He called it “The Latin Triangle”.
It describes a cycle in which governments become trapped in
inappropriate fixed-exchange rates that inevitably end unhappily. Latin
America has put that particular form of economic instability behind it,
but a new version of the Latin triangle seems to be playing itself out
in Europe today, both in the weaker members of the euro area (the
so-called PIIGS) and in some of the newer member states that chose fixed
rates (the BELLs—Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania). This post
explores the implications of the Latin American experience for Europe
today. >>>Read More
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment