Financial Dollarization and Dedollarization

Peer Reviewed icon Peer Reviewed
Date issued
Sep 2005
Subject
Financial Sector
JEL code
F31 - Foreign Exchange;
G11 - Portfolio Choice • Investment Decisions;
G28 - Government Policy and Regulation;
O16 - Financial Markets • Saving and Capital Investment • Corporate Finance and Governance
Category
Technical Notes
Financial dollarization is a key factor behind systemic financial fragility in Latin America. The experience shows that dedollarization can be achieved but can just as easily be missed, and worse: blunt dedollarization measures repressing dollarization may easily fail to solve fragility and, instead, foster risky short-term debt or provoke massive financial disintermediation and crisis. This paper analyzes the sources of liability dollarization in a portfolio framework and identifies the failures leading to excessive dollarization meriting policy intervention as well as the reasons why dedollarization policy often goes awry. It then derives an analytically sound multipronged domestic dedollarization program that takes into account the risks of misdiagnosis and the experience, both successful and failed. This program centers around the development of good local currency substitutes for dollar debt, such as CPI-indexed debt, rather than the repression of dollar debt.