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EMPI Formula
EMPI Gauge
Crisis Assessment
EMPI Component Breakdown
Formula Breakdown
Vulnerability Thresholds
| Level | Conditions |
|---|---|
| Critical | EMPI ≥ 20 AND GG ≥ 100% |
| High | EMPI ≥ 10 OR (GG ≥ 100% AND Ext Debt > 60%) |
| Moderate | EMPI ≥ 5 OR GG ≥ 100% OR Ext Debt > 60% |
| Low | EMPI < 5, GG < 100%, Ext Debt ≤ 60% |
Understanding Currency Crises & the EMPI
What is the Exchange Market Pressure Index?
The Exchange Market Pressure Index (EMPI) is a composite indicator that measures the intensity of speculative pressure on a country's currency. It combines three observable market signals: exchange rate depreciation, interest rate increases (as the central bank defends the currency), and foreign reserve depletion (from forex market intervention).
The concept originated with Girton and Roper (1977) and was popularized for currency-crisis applications by Eichengreen, Rose, and Wyplosz (1995–96), who added the interest-rate dimension. The EMPI captures pressure even from defended attacks—when a central bank successfully prevents depreciation by spending reserves or raising rates, those actions still register as pressure in the index.
Depreciation + Rate hikes + Reserve losses = Total pressure
Currency Crisis Dynamics
According to Mishkin Chapter 13, currency crises in emerging markets typically follow one of two paths:
Credit Boom & Bust
Financial liberalization opens capital flows, leading to excessive lending, deteriorating bank balance sheets, and eventual collapse. Example: East Asian crisis (1997).
Fiscal Imbalances
Unsustainable government deficits erode investor confidence, forcing banks to absorb government debt, weakening the financial system. Example: Argentina (2001).
The Guidotti-Greenspan Rule
The Guidotti-Greenspan ratio (short-term external debt due within one year / foreign reserves) is a widely used reserve-adequacy benchmark. When this ratio exceeds 100%, a country's reserves cannot fully cover its near-term external obligations, making it vulnerable to a sudden stop in capital flows. This rule was proposed by Pablo Guidotti and endorsed by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.
Key Assumptions & Limitations
- Equal weights by default; academic EMPI uses inverse of historical standard deviations
- Interest rate term is a simplified policy-rate change; academic versions use rate differentials
- Single-period snapshot; no time-series dynamics or rolling windows
- Omits current-account financing, exchange-rate regime, banking fragility, contagion, and political shocks
- Exchange rate changes are direct percentages (not log-returns)
- For educational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and uses illustrative heuristic pressure bands. Actual crisis identification requires country-specific historical data, volatility normalization, and professional analysis. The Guidotti-Greenspan ratio is a reserve-adequacy benchmark, not a mechanical crisis trigger. This tool should not be used for investment or policy decisions.