Generally speaking, given their relatively high interest rates compared with that of the developed market economies, emerging market economies are the destination of hot money. Although the emerging market countries welcome capital inflows such as foreign direct investment, because of hot money's negative effects on the economy, they are instituting policies to stop hot money from coming into their country in order to eliminate the negative consequences. Different countries are using different methods to prevent massive influx of hot money. The following are the main methods of dealing with hot money. On February 14, 2011, Mehmet Simsek, the Turkish Finance Minister said: "more than $8 billion in short-term investment had exited the country after the central bank cut rates and took steps to slow credit growth. The markets have got the message that Turkey does not want hot money inflows." •
Capital controls: some capital control policies adopted by China belong to this category. For example, in China, the government does not allow foreign funds to invest directly in its
capital market. Also, the
central bank of China sets quotas for its domestic
financial institutions for the use of short-term foreign debt and prevent banks from overusing their quotas. In June 1991, the Chilean government instituted a non-remunerated (non-paid) 20 percent
reserve requirement to be deposited at the Central Bank for a period of one year for liabilities in foreign currency, for firms which are borrowing directly in foreign currency. •
Increasing bank reserve requirements and sterilization: some countries pursue a
fixed exchange rate policy. In the face of large net capital inflow, those countries would
intervene in the foreign exchange market to prevent exchange rate appreciation. Then sterilize the monetary impact of intervention through
open market operations and through increasing
bank reserves requirements. For example, when hot money originated from the U.S. enters China, investors would sell
US dollars and buy
Chinese yuan in the
foreign exchange market. This would put upward pressure on the value of the yuan. In order to prevent the appreciation of the Chinese currency, the central bank of China print yuan to buy US dollars. This would increase money supply in China, which would in turn cause inflation. Then, the central bank of China has to increase bank reserve requirements or issue Chinese government bonds to bring back the money that it has previously released into the market in the exchange rate intervention operation. However, like other approaches, this approach has limitations. The first, the
central bank can't keep increasing bank reserves, because doing so would negatively affect bank's profitability. The second, in the emerging market economies, the domestic financial market is not deep enough for open market operations to be effective. •
Fiscal tightening: the idea is to use fiscal restraint, especially in the form of spending cuts on nontradables, so as to lower
aggregate demand and curb the inflationary impact of capital inflow. == References ==