PAULA, Luiz Fernando Rodrigues de
Fragilidade financeira externa e os limites da política cambial no real - São Paulo : Editora 34, jan./mar. 1999
This article assesses the impacts of Brazils exchange-based stabilization plan (Plano Real) on the countrys external financial fragility and discusses alternative exchange policy to overcome the Brazils external vulnerability. In order to do so, we have developed an index for this external financial fragility, which is applied to a time series of foreign sector variables from 1992 to 1997. The evidences show that Brazilian external financial fragility has grown during the first three years and half after the Real Plan, particularly in 1996 and 1997. Using this evidence, the paper questions the effectiveness of the governments adjustment strategy for the industrial sector, based on four pillars: price stabilization, trade and capital liberalization and exchange appreciation. Finally, we conclude that the scope for changes in currently exchange policy is too small: the government is prisoner of a self-inflicted exchange trap
Fragilidade financeira externa e os limites da política cambial no real - São Paulo : Editora 34, jan./mar. 1999
This article assesses the impacts of Brazils exchange-based stabilization plan (Plano Real) on the countrys external financial fragility and discusses alternative exchange policy to overcome the Brazils external vulnerability. In order to do so, we have developed an index for this external financial fragility, which is applied to a time series of foreign sector variables from 1992 to 1997. The evidences show that Brazilian external financial fragility has grown during the first three years and half after the Real Plan, particularly in 1996 and 1997. Using this evidence, the paper questions the effectiveness of the governments adjustment strategy for the industrial sector, based on four pillars: price stabilization, trade and capital liberalization and exchange appreciation. Finally, we conclude that the scope for changes in currently exchange policy is too small: the government is prisoner of a self-inflicted exchange trap