These papers provide a cutting-edge overview of general issues regarding world capital markets, experience in developing countries, and capital market regulation, which many economists believe could turn into the number one topic in international business and economics.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Part 1: Introduction
- 1: John Eatwell and Lance Taylor: Introduction
- Part 2: Global Questions
- 2: John Eatwell and: A World Financial Authority
- Lance Taylor
- 3: Jose: Recasting the International Financial Agenda
- Antonio Ocampo
- 4: Financial Regulation in a Liberalized Global
- Environment
- 5: Capital Controls and the World Financial Authority:
- What Can We Learn from the Indian Experience?
- Nayyar
- 6: International Capital Mobility, Macroeconomic
- Imbalances, and the Risk of Global Contraction
- Blecker
- 7: The Politics of Global Financial Regulation: Lessons
- from the Fight Against Money Laundering
- Part 3: Issues in Industrialized Economies
- 8: Financial Market Liberalization and the Changing
- Character of Corporate Governance
- 9: The Influence of the Financial Media over
- International Economic Policy
- Part 4: Developing and Transition Economies
- 10: Capital Market Liberalization and Economic
- Performance in Latin America
- 11: FX Short Positions, Balance Sheets, and Financial
- Turbulence
- 12: The Three Routes to Financial Crises: The Need for
- Capital Controls
- 13: Ajit: "Asian Capitalism" and the Financial Crisis
- Singh
- 14: The Triumph of the Rentiers? The 1997 Korean Crisis
- in Historical Perspective
- 15: Gabriel Palma: The Magical Realism of Brazillian Economics: How to Create a Financial Crisis by Trying to Avoid One
- Part 5: Regulatory Questions
- 16: Synthetic Assets, Risk Management, and
- Imperfections
- 17: The role of Derivatives in the East Asian Financial
- Crisis
- 18: Philip: Procyclicality of Regulatory Ratios?
- Turner