Chile: A Changed Jungle for the Latin Am...
Li, Wei, Matte, Jo...
Chile: A Changed Jungle for the Latin American Tiger (B)
BP-0462 | Published September 6, 2002 | 11 pages Case
Collection: Darden School of Business
Product Details
In the early 1990s, in the context of massive foreign capital inflows, the Chilean government restricted the flow of capital into the country to achieve a competitive and stable exchange rate and to control inflation. By the late 1990s, with the onset of the financial crises in emerging-market economies, investors began to pull their capital out of Chile and other emerging markets indiscriminately. This sudden reversal of capital flows was threatening to ignite a balance-of-payments crisis in Chile. The government had to decide what to do. This B case gives an update to the events that unfolded in the A case ("Chile: A Changed Jungle for the Latin American Tiger (A)" [UVA-BP-0461]) and abridged case ("Chile: A Changed Jungle for the Latin American Tiger (Abridged)" [UVA-BP-0458]).
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