Hardback
Private Capital Flows in the Age of Globalization
The Aftermath of the Asian Crisis
9781840642148 Edward Elgar Publishing
The Asian crisis demonstrates how interconnected the global economy has become, and this book is the first attempt, by an international group of experts, to understand the Asian financial crisis by taking into account the dynamics of private capital flows.
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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
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In the second half of 1997 Thailand, Malaysia, Korea and Indonesia experienced a massive outflow of foreign capital – more than $100 billion. The effects of this rival the worst years of the Latin American debt crisis and the early years of the Great Depression.
The Asian crisis demonstrates how interconnected the global economy has become, and this book is the first attempt, by an international group of experts, to understand the Asian financial crisis by taking into account the dynamics of private capital flows. The authors answer some of the most important questions relating to the Asian crisis, and seek to find solutions to prevent such crises occurring again, including:
• what caused the crisis in Asian countries?
• why did most analysts fail to anticipate the crisis?
• why were the effects so severe?
• what is the key to recovery in Asia and other crisis countries?
• what can be done to prevent such a crisis from occurring again?
• how can the international system deal with such circumstances more successfully?
Private Capital Flows in the Age of Globalization will be invaluable to policymakers, investors and scholars working in the fields of money, finance and banking, Asian studies, development and international economics.
The Asian crisis demonstrates how interconnected the global economy has become, and this book is the first attempt, by an international group of experts, to understand the Asian financial crisis by taking into account the dynamics of private capital flows. The authors answer some of the most important questions relating to the Asian crisis, and seek to find solutions to prevent such crises occurring again, including:
• what caused the crisis in Asian countries?
• why did most analysts fail to anticipate the crisis?
• why were the effects so severe?
• what is the key to recovery in Asia and other crisis countries?
• what can be done to prevent such a crisis from occurring again?
• how can the international system deal with such circumstances more successfully?
Private Capital Flows in the Age of Globalization will be invaluable to policymakers, investors and scholars working in the fields of money, finance and banking, Asian studies, development and international economics.
Critical Acclaim
‘This is a penetrating study that is of great value to a wide range of professionals in fields of money, finance and banking as well as fields of economics.’
– Aslib Book Guide
– Aslib Book Guide
Contributors
Contributors: V.K. Aggarwal, M. Aglietta, R. Chang, U. Dadush, D. Dasgupta, G. Esquivel, R. Garnaut, R.A. Gitlin, G.W. Johnson, F. Larraín B., P.D. Leake, M. Miller, F.S. Mishkin, H.K. Pyo, A.C. Rogoff, M. Uzan, A. Velasco, D. Wilson, L. Zhang
Contents
Contents: Introduction Part I: The Asian Crisis in Perspective 1. Excess Competition, Moral Hazard and Industrial Trauma in Korea 1997–8 2. The Asian Financial Crisis in Perspective 3. The East Asian Financial Crisis 4. Latin America Confronting the Asian Crisis Part II: Debt Restructuring and Orderly Work-Outs 5. Exorcizing Asian Debt 6. At the Insolvency Masquerade, What Mask for the IMF? 7. Sovereign Rescues Part III: Moral Hazard and Systemic Risk 8. Systemic Risk, Moral Hazard and the International Lender of Last Resort 9. Dealing with Systemic Risk 10. Creditor Panic, Asset Bubbles and Sharks Index