Foreign Exchange Reserves. Recent Evolution

The report discusses the recent evolution of foreign exchange reserves globally and in Latin America and the Caribbean.

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Quick Facts
Report location: source source 2
Language: English
Publisher: Economic Commission For Latin America And The Caribbean
Authors: Helvia Velloso, In?s Bustillo, Daniel E. Perrotti
Time horizon: 2016
Geographic focus: Global, Latin_America, Caribbean
Page count: 14 pages

Methods

The research method involved analyzing data from the International Monetary Fund and country central banks to track the recent evolution of foreign exchange reserves globally and in Latin America and the Caribbean.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

Key Insights

The world's foreign exchange reserves declined by 7% from Q1 2014 to Q2 2016, with a significant drop in emerging and developing economies. Advanced economies saw a slight increase. China, with the largest reserves, experienced an 8% reduction in 2016. Latin America and the Caribbean had two trends in reserves accumulation - a decline until 2015 and an increase in 2016. Brazil and Mexico hold the largest reserves in the region. Peru has the highest reserves-to-GDP ratio. Stress tests show that most Latin American countries have enough reserves to cover their current account deficits for more than two years and at least three quarters of imports.

(Generated with the help of GPT-4)

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