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Financial Globalization, Economic Growth, and the Crisis of 2007-09 (Paperback)
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Financial Globalization, Economic Growth, and the Crisis of 2007-09 (Paperback)
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This book examines the role of financial globalization in economic
growth and derives corresponding implications for economic policy.
Although economists have debated the importance of openness to
international trade, they generally agree that in the market for
goods, international openness is more favorable to growth than a
largely closed economy. In contrast, whether external financial
openness boosts or curbs growth has long been a controversial
issue, and it has become even more so with the outbreak of the
global financial crisis of 2007-09.The East Asian financial crisis
of the late 1990s raised doubts on this issue, and helped spur a
wave of empirical research on it. Supporters of financial
globalization-such as Stanley Fischer and Lawrence
Summers-maintained that, with the right policies, open capital
markets continued to be a powerful means for enhancing growth.
Critics, including Jagdish Bhagwati and Joseph Stiglitz, argued
that the crisis demonstrated that, unlike free trade in goods, free
mobility for capital is counterproductive for growth. In the past
decade a large empirical literature has emerged examining this
question. Overall it has tended to find that financial
globalization has "positive marginal effects on growth." The US-led
financial crisis of 2007-09 swept most of the developed and
emerging-market economies into its vortex. The global crisis has
set the stage for an intensification of the debate on financial
openness. Some analysts and policymakers will be inclined to
escalate calls for restrictions on capital flows. In the acute
phase of the crisis that began in September 2008, major stock
markets around the world plunged along with the US equity market,
and many currencies fell sharply against the dollar (excluding the
yen, which proved, like the dollar, to be a safe-haven currency).
If countries had maintained closed capital markets, some may argue,
they would not have been vulnerable to these shocks. Cline asserts
that financial globalization represents a significant factor in
economic growth of emerging-market economies. Further, he argues
that a significant portion of current-day GDP can be attributed to
the cumulative influence of financial openness, especially in
industrial countries.This study surveys the extensive literature on
this issue to arrive at a broad sense of the state of the evidence
for and against the growth benefits of financial openness. The
survey is critical in the sense that it seeks to evaluate strengths
and weaknesses of the various studies in addition to summarizing
their results. It then applies leading quantitative models from the
literature to arrive at synthesis estimates of the contribution of
financial openness to growth for major industrial and
emerging-market economies over the past four decades. Finally, the
book considers the preliminary evidence on whether the 2007-09
financial crisis constitutes grounds for a major change in the
policy verdict on financial openness. As part of that
reconsideration, the analysis reviews the causes of the global
crisis, as well as its principal events and policy interventions.
General
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