经常账户
国际收支平衡
新兴市场
嫌疑犯
经济
赤字支出
金融危机
发展经济学
贸易差额
经济政策
国际经济学
汇率
货币经济学
政治学
宏观经济学
债务
法学
出处
期刊:Palgrave Macmillan UK eBooks
[Palgrave Macmillan UK]
日期:2004-01-01
卷期号:: 81-91
被引量:358
标识
DOI:10.1057/9781403943859_5
摘要
Prior to the Tequila crisis of 1994–95 in Mexico, balance-of-payments crises in emerging-market economies were quickly attributed to macro-economic mismanagement — the first and foremost suspect always being an ‘unsustainable’ fiscal deficit. The Mexican crisis questioned this conventional view because the country was emerging from a long period of stability during which important structural reform had been undertaken and, on the whole, fiscal deficit had been brought under control. However, conventional wisdom started to shift towards focusing not just on fiscal deficit, but also on the current account deficit — undoubtedly a more encompassing measure of a country’s deficit. Mexico showed some weakness in this respect, as its current account deficit was about 8 per cent in 1994 and was programmed to rise to 9 per cent in 1995. This was considered ‘unsustainable’ for Mexico, given its poor growth record.1 The new crisis paradigm had hardly begun when Asia fell into disarray. The unsustainability flag could not easily be raised in this instance, especially for countries like Korea and Indonesia. For the first time, conventional wisdom turned its attention to what is likely to be central to all recent crises, namely, financial-sector weaknesses.
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