Graciela Kaminsky

Last updated
Graciela Kaminsky
CitizenshipAmerican
Academic career
InstitutionThe George Washington University
Alma materMIT
Website https://www.gracielakaminsky.com

Graciela Kaminsky is a professor of economics and international affairs at George Washington University and a faculty research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Kaminsky studied economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where she received her Ph.D. In 1984 she did a brief research stay at the Argentine Central Bank, later in 1985 she moved to San Diego as an assistant professor at the University of California. In 1992 she worked on the board of governors of the US Federal Reserve System, later in 1998 she was appointed a full professor at George Washington University, where she works at the Elliot School of International Affairs. Kaminsky has been a visiting scholar at the Bank of Japan, the Bank of Spain, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, and the Central Bank of France. [1]

Contents

Kaminsky’s research focuses on contagion, currency and financial crises, exchange rates, fiscal and monetary policies, international capital flows as well as sovereign debt crises. She has published numerous academic journals, including the American Economic Review , the Journal of Economic Perspectives , Journal of Development Economics , Journal of Monetary Economics and the Journal of International Economics . Furthermore, her research has been highlighted in the financial media such as Business Week , The Financial Times and The Economist . [1]

Research in fiscal and monetary policy

One of Kaminsky’s first publications was "Is there a Peso Problem? Evidence from the Dollar/Pound Exchange Rate" [2] published for the American Economic Review in 1994 and explores whether exchange rate forecasts are rational. She notes that investors can be rational and yet make repeated mistakes if the true model of the exchange rate evolved over time. Kaminsky concludes that exchange rate process has been evolving over time, capturing the changing regimes in the market fundamentals.

In 1996, alongside Karen K. Lewis, Kaminsky published, "Does foreign exchange intervention signal future monetary policy?", which seeks to empirically examine the effects of foreign exchange intervention on the exchange rate.

Two years later Kaminsky wrote "High Real Interest Rates in the Aftermath of Disinflation: Is it a Lack of Credibility" co-authored with Leonardo Leiderman and examines whether the lack of credibility of investors who assumed the stabilization programs in Argentina, Israel and Mexico in the mid-1980s are to blame for the high real interest rates in the months after the launch of the program.

In 2004 alongside Carmen M. Reinhart and Carlos A. Vegh they published "When it Rains, it Pours: Procyclical Capital Flows and Macroeconomic Policies" for the National Bureau of Economic Research. They document the capital flows, fiscal policy and monetary policy based on a sample of 104 countries. They claim that net capital inflows, fiscal policy and monetary policy appear to be procyclical for the majority of developing countries. Furthermore, periods of capital inflows are associated with expansionary macroeconomic policies and periods of capital outflows with contractionary policies in developing countries with emerging markets.

In 2010 in "Terms of Trade Shocks and Fiscal Cycles", Kaminsky examined the links between fiscal policy and terms of trade fluctuation using a sample of 74 countries both from developing and developed backgrounds. She concludes that booms in the terms of trade do not necessarily lead to larger government surpluses in developing countries, especially in emerging markets. However, this is not the case in OECD countries, where fiscal policy is of a unique nature.

In February 2016 Alongside Pablo Vega-García she did an extensive research analyzing sovereign debt defaults from years 1820 to the Great Depression with a special focus on Latin America titled, "Systematic and Idiosyncratic Sovereign Debt Crises". They found that 63% of the crises were of a systematic nature. What these crises had in common were the international collapse of liquidity and the growth slowdown in the financial centers.

In December 2016 she published "Globalization in the Periphery: Monetary Policy: What is Gained, What is Lost" which focuses on the general misconceptions of globalization. She presents evidence that indicates that globalization has brought on better institutions and policies in developing countries. She notes that monetary policies in developing countries are now less ties to financing fiscal deficits and inflation.

Research in currency and financial crises

Written for the Journal of Development Economics in 1996, "The Debt Crises: Lessons of the 1980s for the 1990s" by Kaminsky and Alfredo Pereira underlines the growth collapse of the Latin American debtor countries. Both academics seek to prove the popular claims that the debt crises is the main reason for the growth collapse in these countries. They found that once they accounted for social inequality on government policy and consumption, the burden of servicing the debt becomes an important factor in explaining the overall investment and economic growth in Latin America.

In March 1998, Kaminsky wrote "Leading Indicators of Currency Crises" alongside Saul Lizondo and Carmen M Reinhart examining the evidence on currency crises. More specifically, the authors propose an early warning system which involves monitoring the evolution of indicators that tend to exhibit a systematic behavior in the periods where a crisis soon follows. The main indicators identified in the paper are the behaviour of international reserves, real exchange rates, domestic credit, credit to the public sector and domestic inflation. Furthermore, if any of these indicators is offset, the probability of a crises occurring is probable within the following 24 months of the indicators issuing a signal.

Similarly, Kaminsky and Carmen M. Reinhart wrote "Financial Crises in Asian and Latin America: Then and Now" comparing the economies of both regions from the 1970s-1990s. Both authors also wrote "The Twin Crises: The Causes of Banking and Balance-of-Payments Problem" and analyzed the links between banking and currency crises. They find that a banking crises tends to precede a currency crises – this currency crises worsens the banking crises which in turn creates a vicious spiral. The authors find that crises occur as the economy enters into a recession, after booming economic activity that was fueled by credit, capital inflows and an overvalued currency.

Kaminsky does a thorough analysis of the crisis in Asia in "What Triggers Market Jitters: A Chronicle of the Asian Crisis" and what type of news moves the economy into a market jitter. Kaminsky found that local and neighbour-country news and their updates regarding international agreements have a substantial effect. In 2000, Graciela Kaminsky and Carmen M. Reinhart published "On Crises, Contagion and Confusion" in the Journal of International Economics and they assess through which channels the crises spread by assessing both trade and financial links.

In 2001 Kaminsky proposed a new approach to examine the behaviour of international integration of financial markets in "Short- and Long Run Integration: Do Capital Control Matter". Kaminsky found markets seem to be linked at longer rather than short run integration of economies with world financial markets. She found little evidence that capital controls do in fact insulate domestic markets from global spillovers.

"Financial Markets in Times of Stress" was published in 2002 for the Journal of Development Economics alongside Carmen M. Reinhart. Both authors examined which markets are most synchronized internationally and exhibit the greater extent of co-movement. The focus on asset markets such as; bonds, equities, foreign exchange, and domestic money market. The research seek to analyze which markets show evidence of co-movement irrespective of whether there are adverse shocks or not. Similar to this research is Kaminsky’s paper for the Journal of International Money and Finance in 2006 titled, "Currency Crises: Are they all the Same?".

In 2007 Kaminsky and Marco Cipriani published "Volatility in International Financial Market Issuance: The Role of the Financial Center" for the Hong Kong Institute for Monetary Research. Together they studied the pattern of volatility of gross issuance in international capital markets since the 1980s. They found short episodes of high volatility however this declines on the long run suggesting that international financial integration has not made financial markets more erratic.

Awards and recognition

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">International Monetary Fund</span> International financial institution

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is a major financial agency of the United Nations, and an international financial institution, headquartered in Washington, D.C., consisting of 190 countries. Its stated mission is "working to foster global monetary cooperation, secure financial stability, facilitate international trade, promote high employment and sustainable economic growth, and reduce poverty around the world." Formed in 1944, started on December 27, 1945, at the Bretton Woods Conference, primarily by the ideas of Harry Dexter White and John Maynard Keynes, it came into formal existence in 1945 with 29 member countries and the goal of reconstructing the international monetary system. It now plays a central role in the management of balance of payments difficulties and international financial crises. Countries contribute funds to a pool through a quota system, from which countries experiencing balance of payments problems can borrow money. As of 2016, the fund had SDR 477 billion. The IMF is regarded as the global lender of last resort.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Global financial system</span> Global framework for capital flows

The global financial system is the worldwide framework of legal agreements, institutions, and both formal and informal economic actors that together facilitate international flows of financial capital for purposes of investment and trade financing. Since emerging in the late 19th century during the first modern wave of economic globalization, its evolution is marked by the establishment of central banks, multilateral treaties, and intergovernmental organizations aimed at improving the transparency, regulation, and effectiveness of international markets. In the late 1800s, world migration and communication technology facilitated unprecedented growth in international trade and investment. At the onset of World War I, trade contracted as foreign exchange markets became paralyzed by money market illiquidity. Countries sought to defend against external shocks with protectionist policies and trade virtually halted by 1933, worsening the effects of the global Great Depression until a series of reciprocal trade agreements slowly reduced tariffs worldwide. Efforts to revamp the international monetary system after World War II improved exchange rate stability, fostering record growth in global finance.

Monetary economics is the branch of economics that studies the different theories of money: it provides a framework for analyzing money and considers its functions, and it considers how money can gain acceptance purely because of its convenience as a public good. The discipline has historically prefigured, and remains integrally linked to, macroeconomics. This branch also examines the effects of monetary systems, including regulation of money and associated financial institutions and international aspects.

In economics, hot money is the flow of funds from one country to another in order to earn a short-term profit on interest rate differences and/or anticipated exchange rate shifts. These speculative capital flows are called "hot money" because they can move very quickly in and out of markets, potentially leading to market instability.

The Convertibility plan was a plan by the Argentine Currency Board that pegged the Argentine peso to the U.S. dollar between 1991 and 2002 in an attempt to eliminate hyperinflation and stimulate economic growth. While it initially met with considerable success, the board's actions ultimately failed. The peso was only pegged to the dollar until 2002.

A currency crisis is a type of financial crisis, and is often associated with a real economic crisis. A currency crisis raises the probability of a banking crisis or a default crisis. During a currency crisis the value of foreign denominated debt will rise drastically relative to the declining value of the home currency. Generally doubt exists as to whether a country's central bank has sufficient foreign exchange reserves to maintain the country's fixed exchange rate, if it has any. The crisis is often accompanied by a speculative attack in the foreign exchange market. A currency crisis results from chronic balance of payments deficits, and thus is also called a balance of payments crisis. Often such a crisis culminates in a devaluation of the currency. Financial institutions and the government will struggle to meet debt obligations and economic crisis may ensue. Causation also runs the other way. The probability of a currency crisis rises when a country is experiencing a banking or default crisis, while this probability is lower when an economy registers strong GDP growth and high levels of foreign exchange reserves. To offset the damage resulting from a banking or default crisis, a central bank will often increase currency issuance, which can decrease reserves to a point where a fixed exchange rate breaks. The linkage between currency, banking, and default crises increases the chance of twin crises or even triple crises, outcomes in which the economic cost of each individual crisis is enlarged.

International economics is concerned with the effects upon economic activity from international differences in productive resources and consumer preferences and the international institutions that affect them. It seeks to explain the patterns and consequences of transactions and interactions between the inhabitants of different countries, including trade, investment and transaction.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kenneth Rogoff</span> American economist and chess player

Kenneth Saul Rogoff is an American economist and chess Grandmaster. He is the Thomas D. Cabot Professor of Public Policy and professor of economics at Harvard University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Financial crisis</span> Situation in which financial assets suddenly lose a large part of their nominal value

A financial crisis is any of a broad variety of situations in which some financial assets suddenly lose a large part of their nominal value. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, many financial crises were associated with banking panics, and many recessions coincided with these panics. Other situations that are often called financial crises include stock market crashes and the bursting of other financial bubbles, currency crises, and sovereign defaults. Financial crises directly result in a loss of paper wealth but do not necessarily result in significant changes in the real economy.

In economics, an optimum currency area (OCA) or optimal currency region (OCR) is a geographical region in which it would maximize economic efficiency to have the entire region share a single currency.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Guillermo Calvo</span> Argentine-American economist

Guillermo Antonio Calvo is an Argentine-American economist who is director of Columbia University's mid-career Program in Economic Policy Management in their School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA).

A sudden stop in capital flows is defined as a sudden slowdown in private capital inflows into emerging market economies, and a corresponding sharp reversal from large current account deficits into smaller deficits or small surpluses. Sudden stops are usually followed by a sharp decrease in output, private spending and credit to the private sector, and real exchange rate depreciation. The term “sudden stop” was inspired by a banker’s comment on a paper by Rüdiger Dornbusch and Alejandro Werner about Mexico, that “it is not speed that kills, it is the sudden stop”.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carmen Reinhart</span> American economist

Carmen M. Reinhart is a Cuban-American economist and the Minos A. Zombanakis Professor of the International Financial System at Harvard Kennedy School. Previously, she was the Dennis Weatherstone Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and Professor of Economics and Director of the Center for International Economics at the University of Maryland. She is a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research, Founding Contributor of VoxEU, and a member of Council on Foreign Relations. She is also a member of American Economic Association, Latin American and Caribbean Economic Association, and the Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy. She became the subject of general news coverage when mathematical errors were found in a research paper she co-authored.

Original sin is a term in economics literature, proposed by Barry Eichengreen, Ricardo Hausmann, and Ugo Panizza in a series of papers to refer to a situation in which "most countries are not able to borrow abroad in their domestic currency."

Domestic liability dollarization (DLD) refers to the denomination of banking system deposits and lending in a currency other than that of the country in which they are held. DLD does not refer exclusively to denomination in US dollars, as DLD encompasses accounts denominated in internationally traded "hard" currencies such as the British pound sterling, the Swiss franc, the Japanese yen, and the Euro.

Debt intolerance is a term coined by Carmen Reinhart, Kenneth Rogoff and Miguel Savastano referring to the inability of emerging markets to manage levels of external debt that, under the same circumstances, would be manageable for developed countries, making a direct analogy to lactose-intolerant individuals.

Fear of floating refers to situations where a country prefers a fixed exchange rate to a floating exchange rate regime. This is more relevant in emerging economies, especially when they suffered from financial crisis in last two decades. In foreign exchange markets of the emerging market economies, there is evidence showing that countries who claim they are floating their currency, are actually reluctant to let the nominal exchange rate fluctuate in response to macroeconomic shocks. In the literature, this is first convincingly documented by Calvo and Reinhart with "fear of floating" as the title of one of their papers in 2000. Since then, this widespread phenomenon of reluctance to adjust exchange rates in emerging markets is usually called "fear of floating". Most of the studies on "fear of floating" are closely related to literature on costs and benefits of different exchange rate regimes.

In economics, twin crises are simultaneous crises in banking and currency. The term was introduced in the late 1990s by economists Graciela Kaminsky and Carmen Reinhart, after the occurrence of several episodes with this characteristic around the globe.

Growth in a Time of Debt, also known by its authors' names as Reinhart–Rogoff, is an economics paper by American economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff published in a non peer-reviewed issue of the American Economic Review in 2010. Politicians, commentators, and activists widely cited the paper in political debates over the effectiveness of austerity in fiscal policy for debt-burdened economies. The paper argues that when "gross external debt reaches 60 percent of GDP", a country's annual growth declined by two percent, and "for levels of external debt in excess of 90 percent" GDP growth was "roughly cut in half." Appearing in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2007–2008, the evidence for the 90%-debt threshold hypothesis provided support for pro-austerity policies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Atish R. Ghosh</span> Indian economist

Atish Rex Ghosh is an international economist, who is currently the Historian of the International Monetary Fund. His recent work has focused on issues related to the stability of the international monetary system, including exchange rate regimes, external balance dynamics, capital flows and capital controls, monetary and foreign exchange intervention policies, fiscal space and debt sustainability, and international policy coordination. His work on the management of cross-border capital flows, notably the role of capital controls, has played an important role in influencing the IMF's institutional position on the use of capital controls. Ghosh has also published numerous influential studies on international policy coordination and exchange rate regimes, including three books: Economic Cooperation in an Uncertain World ; Exchange Rate Regimes: Choices and Consequences ; and Currency Boards in Retrospect and Prospect. In addition, he is the author of Nineteenth Street, NW—a fictional novel about a global financial crash.

References

  1. 1 2 "Graciela Kaminsky | Elliott School of International Affairs | The George Washington University". elliott.gwu.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-28.
  2. Kaminsky, Graciela (June 1993). "Is There a Peso Problem? Evidence from the Dollar/Pound Exchange Rate, 1976-1987" (PDF). American Economic Review: 450–472.