War, Peace and Private Portfolios.

During civil wars trading is profitable as markets fragment. Profits may be saved in old form, because investment is too risky. In a successful economic transition to peace these liquid assets are switched into investment. Continuing fears of insecurity, however, may keep portfolios liquid. We consi...

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Main Authors: Collier, P, Gunning, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1995
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author Collier, P
Gunning, J
author_facet Collier, P
Gunning, J
author_sort Collier, P
collection OXFORD
description During civil wars trading is profitable as markets fragment. Profits may be saved in old form, because investment is too risky. In a successful economic transition to peace these liquid assets are switched into investment. Continuing fears of insecurity, however, may keep portfolios liquid. We consider three policy consequences. The unpredictable return of confidence causes erratic changes in the demand for money, complicating monetary targeting. Government liabilities become unmarketable except at prohibitive interest rates, though the state may be able to sell real assets. The government can subsidize the act of investment commitment by temporarily undervaluing the exchange rate.
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spelling oxford-uuid:79d5b2e7-1fe6-436f-a77b-ab0afc119eea2022-03-26T20:39:54ZWar, Peace and Private Portfolios.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:79d5b2e7-1fe6-436f-a77b-ab0afc119eeaEnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrints1995Collier, PGunning, JDuring civil wars trading is profitable as markets fragment. Profits may be saved in old form, because investment is too risky. In a successful economic transition to peace these liquid assets are switched into investment. Continuing fears of insecurity, however, may keep portfolios liquid. We consider three policy consequences. The unpredictable return of confidence causes erratic changes in the demand for money, complicating monetary targeting. Government liabilities become unmarketable except at prohibitive interest rates, though the state may be able to sell real assets. The government can subsidize the act of investment commitment by temporarily undervaluing the exchange rate.
spellingShingle Collier, P
Gunning, J
War, Peace and Private Portfolios.
title War, Peace and Private Portfolios.
title_full War, Peace and Private Portfolios.
title_fullStr War, Peace and Private Portfolios.
title_full_unstemmed War, Peace and Private Portfolios.
title_short War, Peace and Private Portfolios.
title_sort war peace and private portfolios
work_keys_str_mv AT collierp warpeaceandprivateportfolios
AT gunningj warpeaceandprivateportfolios