GAO Documents

GAO Documents

Author: United States. General Accounting Office

Publisher:

Published: 1984

Total Pages: 952

ISBN-13:

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Catalog of reports, decisions and opinions, testimonies and speeches.


Macroeconomic Policies in an Interdependent World

Macroeconomic Policies in an Interdependent World

Author: Mr.Paul R. Masson

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 1989-06-15

Total Pages: 438

ISBN-13: 9781557751119

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Copublished with the Brookings Institution, Washington D.C. and the Centre for Economic Policy Research, London, and edited by Ralph Bryant, David Currie, Jacob A. Frenkel, Paul Masson, and Richard Portes, this volume considers economic interdependence among well developed countries as well as between them and the developing regions of the world.


States and the Reemergence of Global Finance

States and the Reemergence of Global Finance

Author: Eric Helleiner

Publisher: Cornell University Press

Published: 2015-07-14

Total Pages: 284

ISBN-13: 1501701975

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Most accounts explain the postwar globalization of financial markets as a product of unstoppable technological and market forces. Drawing on extensive historical research, Eric Helleiner provides the first comprehensive political history of the phenomenon, one that details and explains the central role played by states in permitting and encouraging financial globalization.Helleiner begins by highlighting the commitment of advanced industrial states to a restrictive international financial order at the 1944 Bretton Woods conference and during the early postwar years. He then explains the growing political support for the globalization of financial markets after the late 1950s by analyzing five sets of episodes: the creation of the Euromarket in the 1960s, the rejection in the early 1970s of proposals to reregulate global financial markets, four aborted initiatives in the late 1970s and early 1980s to implement effective controls on financial movements, the extensive liberalization of capital controls in the 1980s, and the containment of international financial crises at three critical junctures in the 1970s and 1980s.He shows that these developments resulted from various factors, including the unique hegemonic interests of the United States and Britain in finance, a competitive deregulation dynamic, ideological shifts, and the construction of a crisis-prevention regime among leading central bankers. In his conclusion Helleiner addresses the question of why states have increasingly embraced an open, liberal international financial order in an era of considerable trade protectionism.