CRITERIA FOR INTERNATIONAL RESERVES' ADEQUACY:
WHAT LEVEL OF RESERVES UKRAINE NEEDS?
Veronika MOVCHAN (Institute for Economic Research and Policy Consulting)
Discussion of reserves' adequacy has renewed after financial crises in Asia
and Russia. It became evident that large international reserves made countries
less prone to crisis. Special attention was paid to the ratio of a country's
external short-term debt to reserves as a very successful marker of potential
external vulnerability that generally outperforms other reserves' adequacy criteria.
This paper studies applicability of various reserves' adequacy criteria to
Ukraine as a transition economy with large foreign trade turnover and relatively
low external capital flows. It is argued that, despite low capital mobility,
a rise of short-term public debt was a crucial factor for Ukraine's financial
crisis in 1998. At the same time, historical data provide no proof for high
vulnerability of current account as a source of instability. So, it is stated
that debt-related criteria for reserves adequacy could be relevant for Ukraine.
This paper provides calculations of the optimal level of international reserves
based on benchmarks proposed by Wijnholds and Kapteyn with country-specific
adjustments, as well as a discussion of costs of reserves' holding.