Premium
Managing Financial Integration and Capital Mobility—Policy Lessons from the Past Two Decades
Author(s) -
Aizenman Joshua,
Pinto Brian
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
review of international economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.513
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1467-9396
pISSN - 0965-7576
DOI - 10.1111/roie.12061
Subject(s) - financial integration , trilemma , emerging markets , economics , deregulation , financial crisis , financial market , capital market , finance , psychological resilience , financial system , indirect finance , macroeconomics , monetary policy , psychology , psychotherapist
Emerging market experience over the past two decades has revealed the tenuous links between external financial integration and faster growth, and the proclivity of such integration to fuel costly crises. Emerging markets learned, converging to the middle ground of the macroeconomic trilemma. Following their crises of 1997–2001, emerging markets added financial stability as a goal, self‐insured by building up international reserves, and adopted a public finance approach to financial integration. The global crisis of 2008–09 illustrated that the advanced economies “overshot” the optimal degree of financial deregulation, while the resilience of the emerging markets validated their public finance approach to financial integration.