The Politics of Speculative Attacks in Industrial Democracies
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in International Organization
- Vol. 54 (2) , 291-324
- https://doi.org/10.1162/002081800551181
Abstract
Recent models of speculative currency crises contend that market expectations of policy behavior can trigger a speculative attack. We argue that political processes and partisan objectives inform expectations about the government's commitment to the exchange rate. First, market actors anticipate periods when the partisan identity of a government may change through an election or a cabinet collapse. Second, party labels provide information to currency traders about the policy objectives of a potential government. Consequently, we contend that the probability of a speculative attack will be higher when markets expect the cabinet to end and when the cabinet dissolution is likely to produce a leftward shift in policy. A discrete timesurvival model is used to estimate the probability that a cabinet will dissolve in any given month for sixteen parliamentary democracies from 1970 to 1995. The predicted values are then used as a proxy for market expectations in a model of speculative currency crises.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Democracy and Markets: The Case of Exchange RatesAmerican Journal of Political Science, 2000
- Ministerial Autonomy or Ministerial Accommodation? Contested Bases of Government Survival in Parliamentary DemocraciesBritish Journal of Political Science, 1999
- Domestic and Systemic Determinants of Capital Controls in the Developed and Developing WorldInternational Studies Quarterly, 1997
- Varieties of Capital-Market CrisesSSRN Electronic Journal, 1995
- Contagious Speculative AttacksSSRN Electronic Journal, 1994
- Transfers of Governmental PowerComparative Political Studies, 1994
- A Unified Model of Cabinet Dissolution in Parliamentary DemocraciesAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1990
- The American Political Economy: Macroeconomics and Electoral Politics.The Economic Journal, 1988
- A Partisanship Theory of Fiscal and Monetary RegimesJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1987
- A Note on the Meaning of Cabinet DurabilityComparative Political Studies, 1984