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There is a deepening debate in East Asia about the prospects for
common exchange rate arrangements, even including the formation of
a common currency in the longer term. This raises a complex set of
issues and this volume provides a detailed yet comprehensive
examination of key issues in the debate. It looks, for example, at
the nature and extent of linkages in East Asia, in terms of trade
and foreign investment, finance, labour, and consumption,
investment and output. It examines how the exchange rate affects
various aspects of economies. And it critically analyzes various
proposals for currency regimes for the region, including floating
exchange rates, basket pegs, and currency union.
Series Information: RoutledgeCurzon Studies in the Growth Economies of Asia
The focus of international financial reform in recent years has
largely been at the global level, in terms of improving the
international financial architecture, and at the national level in
terms of getting domestic economic and structural policies right.
But there is also a growing appetite for addressing some issues at
a regional level. This debate has focused on improving regional
policy dialogue and surveillance processes, as well as developing
regional mechanisms to provide financial support to prevent and
resolve financial crises. In East Asia, for example, governments
have sought deeper regional policy dialogue by the creation of
ASEAN+3 forum and enhanced financial cooperation by setting up the
Chiang Mai Initiative. These developments raise many questions:
What is 'best-practice' regional policy dialogue? How is a regional
financial architecture complementary to the global architecture?
What sorts of institutions work well at a regional level? Do
regions need a regional monetary fund? What is going on in East
Asia and how is it different to other regions? This volume brings
together a range of policy, practical and conceptual papers to
explore these and other issues.
Recent events in East Asia have highlighted the risks of volatility
and contagion in a financially integrated world. Countries in the
region had been at the forefront of the movement towards increased
integration but the crisis that struck Thailand in July 1997, and
the rapidity with which it spread to other East Asian nations,
suggested that all was not well. Weaknesses in domestic financial
intermediation, poor corporate governance and deficient government
responses to large capital inflows all played a role in the
build-up of vulnerability. Asia-Pacific Financial Deregulation
provides an insight into financial liberalisation and structural
reform in the region generally and as illustrated by a number of
countries.
Recent events in East Asia have highlighted the risks of volatility
and contagion in a financially integrated world. Countries in the
region had been at the forefront of the movement towards increased
integration but the crisis that struck Thailand in July 1997, and
the rapidity with which it spread to other East Asian nations,
suggested that all was not well. Weaknesses in domestic financial
intermediation, poor corporate governance and deficient government
responses to large capital inflows all played a role in the
build-up of vulnerability. Asia-Pacific Financial Deregulation
provides an insight into financial liberalisation and structural
reform in the region generally and as illustrated by a number of
countries.
Hedge funds are among the most innovative and controversial of
financial market institutions. Largely exempt from regulation and
shrouded in secrecy, they are credited as having improved
efficiency and add liquidity to financial markets, but also having
severely destabilised markets following the Asian financial crisis
and the near collapse of long-term capital management. De Brouwer
presents a nuanced and balanced account to what is becoming an
increasingly politicised and hysterical discussion of the subject.
Part I explains the workings of hedge funds. Part II focuses on the
activities of macro hedge funds and proprietary trading desks in
East Asia in 1997 and 1998, with case study material from Hong
Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand.
Part III of the book looks at the future of hedge funds, their role
for institutional investors, and policy proposals to limit their
destabilising effects.
Financial Integration in East Asia, first published in 1999,
examines the degree of domestic and financial openness in ten Asian
countries (Japan, Australia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, South Korea,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand) and the
effect financial openness has on the structure of the macroeconomy.
After examining the reasons behind the 1997/98 financial crisis, Dr
de Brouwer puts these in context by summarising the literature on
the costs and benefits of financial reform. He then assesses the
information that interest rate parity conditions have for financial
openness, and sets out theoretical and empirical models to explore
the link between market interest rates and intermediated interest
rates on deposits and loans. Financial Integration in East Asia
also contains reviews of the literature and regional developments,
with clear policy analysis throughout.
Financial Intergration in East Asia explains the different methods economists use to assess how open a country's financial system is to domestic and international influences, and applies these tests to ten countries in East Asia. It explains how a country that has an open financial system differs from one that is controlled. It explains what happened in East Asia in 1997/98 and reviews the costs and benefits of open financial markets. While it has appeal for the technical reader, the book uses ordinary language and emphasizes economic intuition. The topic is relatively new and fundamentally important to the way governments and markets work in East Asia.
Largely exempt from regulation and shrouded in secrecy, "hedge funds" are one of the most controversial institutions in modern finance. Presenting a balanced view of the subject. De Brouwer explains their workings using case study material from Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand, from 1997 to 1998. He also considers the future of hedge funds, their role for institutional investors, as well as policy proposals to limit their destabilizing effects.
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