United States interest rates, Latin American debt and financial contagion


Autoria(s): Velloso, Helvia; Bustillo, Inés
Data(s)

02/01/2014

02/01/2014

01/12/2002

Resumo

Includes bibliography

This article analyses the way in which Latin American bond spreads were affected by the changes in United States interest rates in the second half of the 1990s. Empirical analysis shows that, contrary to theory, in this period the spreads of emerging market bonds and United States interest rates moved in opposite directions; that there was financial contagion; that contraction of liquidity and financial contagion can offset the effects of those interest rates on the spreads of emerging market bonds at times of economic and financial turbulence and thus become the most important factors in the evolution of those spreads; and that the increased financial integration associated with the current globalization process has heightened the vulnerability of the developing economies to external shocks.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/11362/10908

LC/G.2187-P

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

CEPAL Review

78