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Financial Crises in Emerging Markets
The essays in this volume analyze causes of financial crises in emerging markets and different policy responses.
Reuven Glick (Edited by), Ramon Moreno (Edited by), Mark M. Spiegel (Edited by)
9780521172189, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 17 February 2011
480 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.7 cm, 0.7 kg
This book looks at numerous financial crises, beginning with Mexico in 1994–5, the Asian crisis of 1997–8, and the crises in Russia, Brazil, and other Latin American countries in 1998–9. Such contemporary crises illustrate the risks of financial volatility and macroeconomic instability during the process of economic growth and development. They also raise issues regarding the management of risks associated with liberalization and global integration, particularly in financial markets. Concerns about the implications of international capital flows for developing countries have grown with the sharply increased volume of these flows since the late 1980s. The essays in this volume provide analysis and evidence on the determinants of currency and banking crises in emerging markets, the specific roles of capital flows and the financial sector, and the appropriateness of various policy responses.
Preface
Contributors
1. Financial crises in emerging markets: an introductory overview Reuven Glick, Ramon Moreno, and Mark M. Spiegel
Part I. Determinants and Propagation of Financial Crises: 2. Banking and currency crises: how common are twins? Reuven Glick and Michael M. Hutchison
Discussion Andrew K. Rose
3. Multiple equilibria, contagion, and the emerging market crises Paul R. Masson
Discussion Paolo Pesenti
4. How are shocks propagated internationally? Firm-level evidence from the Russian and East Asian crises Kristen Forbes
Discussion Kenneth Kasa
Part II. Capital Flows and Reversals: 5. Uncertainty and the disappearance of international credit Joshua Aizenman and Nancy Marion
Discussion Mark M. Spiegel
6. International capital inflows, domestic financial intermediation, and financial crises under imperfect information Menzie D. Chinn and Kenneth M. Kletzer
Discussion Roberto Chang
7. Private inflows when crises are anticipated: a case study of Korea Michael P. Dooley and Inseok Shin
Discussion Carmen M. Reinhart
Part III. Institutional Factors and Financial Structure: 8. Excessive FDI Flows under asymmetric information Assaf Razin, Efraim Sadka, and Chi-Wa Yuen
Discussion Maurice Obstfeld
9. Corporate growth and risk around the world Stijn Claessens, Simeon Djankov, and Tatiana Nenova
Discussion Richard K. Lyons
Part IV. Policy Responses: 10. Interest rate stabilization of exchange rates and contagion in the Asian Crisis countries Robert Dekle, Cheng Hsiao, and Siyan Wang
Discussion Pierre-Richard Agénor
11. The impact of monetary policy on exchange rates during financial crises David Gould and Steven Kamin
Discussion Henning Bohn
12. Capital controls during financial crises: the cases of Malaysia and Thailand Hali J. Edison and Carmen M. Reinhart
Index.
Subject Areas: Banking [KFFK], Development economics & emerging economies [KCM], International finance [KCLF]