The Georgian Hyperinflation and Stabilization

This paper anlayzes the Georgian hyperinflation of 1993-94, which featured endogenous fiscal expenditures and the money supply, depreciation, and currency substitution. Hyperinflation was stopped by removing generalized consumer subsidies and tightening of monetary policy, and not by a sudden rush of credibility or imposition of an exchange rate anchor. A de facto exchange rate anchor served ex post as a vehicle for building credibility, which ensured a dramatic reversal of currency substitution when the currency reform was implemented. The paper also discusses the relatively rapid output recovery in Georgia.
Publication date: May 1999
ISBN: 9781451848663
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Inflation , Inflation , Money and Monetary Policy , Money and Monetary Policy , exchange rate , foreign exchange , currency substitution , money supply

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