| TL;DR: Brazil switched to dollar for a moment (to get out of inflation) and then to a new (stable) currency. The theoretical basis for this is the previous works from Persio Arida, André Lara Resende and Edmar Bacha. Two important books about this subject: * A real história do Real; * A saga brasileira. Inflation in Brazil was indeed rampant at this moment, but the cause (when URV entered the scene), wasn't public spending anymore. It was a so-called inertial inflation (a theory, of course. See "Inertial inflation and monetary reform in Brazil"[1]), caused by public (merchants, industry etc) perception (or fear) that prices were always going up. Before that, government made a great job reorganizing the budget, untying public prices from inflation, renegotiating debts with Wall Street and making new debts with the FMI. After the roots of inflation where addressed, it's "inertial psychological" component (as they called it) was shut down with URV. URV, of course, was no virtual or fake currency. It was an index based on (or simply copied from) US dollar price. The real deal here is: how a lean team with a very strong leadership solved this big mess. Those guys were no amateurs and at least on of them were a inflation specialist Phd from MIT (Persio Arida, a Brazilian). The first book was written from a member of staff of this team and it's description of the team gatherings is awesome. 1 - https://ideas.repec.org/p/rio/texdis/85.html |
The fact is that the value of currency is impacted by controlling demand (which the URV was attempting to do with a psychological hack) or by controlling supply (which was being accomplished by the many other very sensible changes)
In the PM story at least, it was unconvincing to me that using a "traditional" currency instead of the URV wouldn't have led to the same result.