What is Driving Financial De-Dollarization in Latin America?

In the last decade, a group of Latin American countries (Bolivia, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay) experienced a gradual, yet sustained decline in financial dollarization. This paper documents the stylized facts and uses a standard VAR approach to examine the drivers of both deposit and credit de-dollarization. It finds that the exchange rate appreciation has been a key factor explaining deposit de-dollarization. The introduction of prudential measures to create incentives to internalize the risks of dollarization (including an active management of reserve requirement differentials), the development of a capital market in local currency, and de-dollarization of deposits have all contributed to a decline in credit dollarization. Continuing efforts on these fronts, while maintaining macroeconomic stability and strong fundamentals, would help deepening de-dollarization.
Publication date: January 2011
ISBN: 9781455211883
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Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics / General , International - Economics , dollarization , exchange rate , exchange rate volatility , constant exchange rate , nominal exchange rate , foreign exchange , exchange rate movements , exchange rate shock , currency risks , exchange rates , exchange rate regime , exchange rate regimes , exchange rate risk , flex

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