The economics of currency crises has evolved through successive “generations” of models, each reflecting the historical experience and intellectual climate of its time. From the fixed exchange rate collapses of the 1970s to the financial crises of the 1990s and beyond, economists have sought to explain why speculative attacks occur, how they unfold, and what policy choices can prevent or exacerbate them. The three generations of models—spanning from mechanical balance-of-payments inconsistencies to self-fulfilling expectations and financial fragility—together trace a trajectory from deterministic to strategic and behavioural understandings of crises. Yet, in a modern world of complex capital markets and hybrid monetary regimes, each generation’s insights also reveals its limitations.
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