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Managing Capital Flows and Exchange Rates: Perspectives from the Pacific Basin
 
 
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Managing Capital Flows and Exchange Rates: Perspectives from the Pacific Basin [Hardcover]

Reuven Glick (Editor)

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Book Description

0521623235 978-0521623230 June 13, 1998
Emerging economies have been the beneficiaries of sharply increased volumes of international capital inflows in the past decade. These inflows have eased foreign financing constraints and offered the potential for higher investment and growth. At the same time, they have posed challenges for policy makers by threatening to fuel inflation, adversely affect international competitiveness, and undermine domestic banking stability. The essays in this volume provide a timely and useful comparison of the experiences of emerging Pacific Basin countries in both Asia and Latin America.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This is a very timely book that brings the reader to the forefront of current research on macroeconomic policy issues in economies subject to sizable capital flows. The papers were written before the recent Asian crises but the analyses, done by top-flight experts, summarize what is known on the subject. I strongly recommend the book both to professional economists and policy makers involved with these types of countries. Although the papers do not stay away from addressing occasionally technical points, the collection has sharp focus on highly relevant policy issues." Guillermo A. Calvo, University of Maryland

"A truly prescient book. With the crises in Thailand, Indonesia and Korea, Asian exchange rates and capital flows are the topics of the day. This book provides the essential background for any economist seeking to understand it." Barry Eichengreen, University of California, Berkeley

"An unusually well-thought out collection of high-caliber essays on the most pressing international economic policy problem of our time. Head and shoulders above the usual conference volume." Kenneth Rogoff, Princeton University

"The essays in this volume...give a comprehensive analysis of the theoretical and policy issues related to international capital flows and exchange rates for developing economies in the Pacific Basin." Macroeconomics

Book Description

Emerging economies have been the beneficiaries of sharply increased volumes of international capital inflows in the last decade. These inflows have eased foreign financing constraints and offered the potential for higher investment and growth. At the same time, they have posed challenges for policy makers by threatening to fuel inflation, adversely affect international competitiveness, and undermine domestic banking stability. The essays in this volume provide a timely and useful comparison of the experiences of emerging Pacific Basin countries in both Asia and Latin America.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Capital inflows to developing countries have many beneficial effects. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
country fund prices, overborrowing cycle, foresight specification, world interest rate shock, capital flow variables, tesobono swaps, taxing capital inflows, log real consumption, private spending booms, rational beliefs equilibrium, multicountry sample, interest rate reaction function, composite shocks, financial market failure, recent capital inflows, capital inflow surges, domestic nominal interest rate, sterilization costs, nonbank private sector, reaction function equation, overborrowing syndrome, multicountry data, bilateral real exchange rates, net debtor countries, currency crashes
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Latin America, United States, New York, Southeast Asian, World Bank, Hong Kong, International Financial Statistics, Czech Republic, Banco de Mexico, International Monetary Fund, Mexico Fund, Staff Papers, Pacific Basin, Taiwan Fund, Journal of Finance, United Kingdom, American Economic Review, Appendix Table, Journal of International Economics, University of Chicago Press, Carmen Reinhart, College Park, Reuven Glick, University of Maryland, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
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