Global Financial Integration Thirty Years On: From Reform to Crisis

Global Financial Integration Thirty Years On: From Reform to Crisis

Global Financial Integration Thirty Years On: From Reform to Crisis

Global Financial Integration Thirty Years On: From Reform to Crisis

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Overview

Early in the new millennium it appeared that a long period of financial crisis had come to an end, but the world now faces renewed and greater turmoil. This 2010 volume analyses the past three decades of global financial integration and governance and the recent collapse into crisis, offering a coherent and policy-relevant overview. State-of-the-art research from an interdisciplinary group of scholars illuminates the economic, political and social issues at the heart of devising an effective and legitimate financial system for the future. The chapters offer debate around a series of core themes which probe the ties between public and private actors and their consequences for outcomes for both developed markets and developing countries alike. The contributors argue that developing effective, legitimate financial governance requires enhancing public versus private authority through broader stakeholder representation, ensuring more acceptable policy outcomes.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780511849138
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 09/02/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Geoffrey R. D. Underhill is Chair in International Governance in the Department of Political Science at the University of Amsterdam.

Jasper Blom is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Amsterdam.

Daniel Mügge is Assistant Professor of International Political Economy in the Department of Political Science at the University of Amsterdam.

Table of Contents

Introduction: the challenges and prospects of global financial integration Geoffrey R. D. Underhill, Jasper Blom and Daniel Mügge; Part I. History and Context: Input, Output and the Current Architecture (Whence it Came): 1. Financial governance in historical perspective: lessons from the 1920s Randall Germain; 2. Between the storms: patterns in global financial governance 2001–7 Eric Helleiner and Stefano Pagliari; 3. Deliberative international financial governance and apex policy forums: where we are and where we should be headed Andrew Baker; 4. Finance, globalisation and economic development: the role of institutions Danny Cassimon, Panicos Demetriades and Björn Van Campenhout; Part II. Assessing the Current Financial Architecture (How Well Does it Work?): 5. Adopting international financial standards in Asia: convergence or divergence in the global political economy Andrew Walter; 6. The political economy of Basel II in the international financial architecture Stijn Claessens and Geoffrey R. D. Underhill; 7. The catalytic approach to debt workout in practice: coordination failure between the IMF, the Paris Club and official creditors Eelke de Jong and Koen van der Veer; 8. Empirical evidence on the new international aid architecture Stijn Claessens, Danny Cassimon and Björn van Campenhout; 9. Who governs and why? The making of a global anti-money laundering regime Eleni Tsingou; 10. Brazil and Argentina in the global financial system: contrasting approaches to development and foreign debt Victor Klagsbrunn; 11. Global markets, national alliances and financial transformations in East Asia Xiaoke Zhang; Part III. What Does the Future Hold? Reactions to the Current Regime and Prospects for Progress (Where is it Going?): 12. Changing transatlantic financial regulatory relations at the turn of the millennium Elliot Posner; 13. Monetary and financial co-operation in Asia: improving legitimacy and effectiveness? Heribert Dieter; 14. From microcredit to microfinance to inclusive finance: a response to global financial openness Brigitte Young; 15. Combating pro-cyclicality in the international financial architecture: towards development-friendly financial governance José Ocampo and Stephany Griffith-Jones; 16. Public interest, national diversity and global financial governance Geoffrey R. D. Underhill and Xiaoke Zhang; Conclusion: whither global financial governance after the crisis? Daniel Mügge, Jasper Blom and Geoffrey R. D. Underhill.
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