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Recent efforts to create a European Central Bank (ECB) have
stimulated debate on new topics for research into the political
economy of the European Community's institutions. These include the
exact division of responsibilities of national governments and the
ECB - especially concerning exchange rate policy; the need for and
design of constraints on national fiscal policies; and the nature
of the transition from adjustable parities and national monetary
policies to irrevocably fixed parities and a single European
monetary policy. The book also considers the implications of EMU
for the international monetary system - for the use of the ECU as a
reserve currency and for policy co-ordination among the G-7
countries. The volume thus provides a comprehensive examination of
the issues that will be decisive for Europe in its choice of
monetary institutions.
The extensive reforms and liberalization of financial services
in emerging markets worldwide call for cutting-edge strategies to
capture the benefits of new investment opportunities. In Open
Doors, a volume of papers from the third annual Financial Markets
and Development conference, multidisciplinary financial sector
experts analyze current economic and political trends and prescribe
practical advice to the financial development community. The book
addresses the key issues of concern regarding the emerging markets,
including the trends, motivations, and scope of FDI in finance;
policy options that will best capture the opportunities of foreign
entry; and the role of foreign institutions in e-finance
innovation. The authors focus on specific topics such as foreign
participation in emerging market banking systems and securities
industries, WTO policies and enforcement, the role of foreign
banks, liberalization of insurance markets, the need for capital
markets, and the policy, regulatory, and legal issues associated
with e-finance. For policymakers and financial practitioners
affected by the WTO's Financial Services Agreement, this timely
book should be of particular interest. Contributors include Donald
Mathieson (International Money Fund), Pierre Sauv? (Trade
Directorate, OECD), George J. Vojta (formerly with Bankers Trust
and Citibank), Harold D. Skipper (J. Mack Robinson College of
Business, Georgia State University), Benn Steil (Council on Foreign
Relations), Morris Goldstein and Edward M. Graham (Institute for
International Economics), Nicolas Lardy (Brookings Institution),
Phillip Turner (Bank of International Settlements), and Robert
Ledig (Fried, Frank, Shriver & Jacobson).
This book presents articles that focus on the inter-related issues
of choice of exchange rate and monetary policy regimes, and others
that use a global macroeconomic model developed by the author and
collaborators to quantify the effects of the 'baby boom' on global
imbalances, costs of disinflation, and the effects of German
unification. The book presents new analysis of the euro-zone
experience and its applicability to other monetary unions, as well
as a discussion of the prerequisites for successful inflation
targeting. It is grounded in real-world data, readily accessible to
non-specialists, and addresses important economic policy issues.
Previous efforts to create a European Central Bank (ECB) have
stimulated debate on topics for research into the political economy
of the European Community's institutions. These include the exact
division of responsibilities of national governments and the ECB -
especially concerning exchange rate policy; the need for and design
of constraints on national fiscal policies; and the nature of the
transition from adjustable parities and national monetary policies
to irrevocably fixed parities and a single European monetary
policy. The book also considers the implications of EMU for the
international monetary system - for the use of the ECU as a reserve
currency and for policy coordination among the G-7 countries. The
volume thus provides a comprehensive examination of the issues that
will be decisive for Europe in its choice of monetary institutions.
This book provides an overview as well as the latest research on
currency unions - geographical areas throughout which a single
currency circulates as the medium of exchange. The issues discussed
are central to debates on economic and monetary union in Europe,
and the future of Eastern Europe. In addition to a specially
written survey chapter by the editors, it contains previously
unpublished contributions by leading researchers in the field,
discussing real and potential currency unions in the United States,
the former Soviet Union, Europe, and Africa.
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