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Lecture 22: Crises in Emerging Markets
Lecture 22: Crises in Emerging Markets

... Notes: Data on private capital flows from IMF's IFS database, Dec. 2013. Capital flows are private financial flows to emerging markets and developing economies. Volatility index measured by the Chicago Board's VIX or VXO at end of period. 2013 data are estimates. See K.Forbes & F.Warnock (2012), “Ca ...
Understanding Human Capital
Understanding Human Capital

... That’s because many traditional asset allocation methodologies don’t consider a person’s human capital, a predominately fixed income-like asset that reflects the person’s ability to earn and save throughout their lives. Depending on the person’s line of work, human capital— which comprises such thin ...
This PDF is a selection from a published volume from... Economic Research Volume Title: NBER International Seminar on Macroeconom
This PDF is a selection from a published volume from... Economic Research Volume Title: NBER International Seminar on Macroeconom

... factor endowments from industrialized countries. The surprising impact of capital account liberalization is confirmed when comparing low‐income countries to high‐income countries: while capital account liberalization generates capital outflows from low‐ income countries, it generates capital inflows ...
PwC Saratoga: Metric of the Month
PwC Saratoga: Metric of the Month

... project recent trends, model forecasted headcount or revenues and in the development of improvement scenarios. As a ratio Human Capital ROI is not positively affected by inflation and there can be no expectation of steadily improving figures over time as might be the case with revenue measures. To a ...
TFP, intangible assets and spatial dependence in the European
TFP, intangible assets and spatial dependence in the European

... The role of intangible assets /1 We include in the production function also the intangible assets whose positive role on the economic performance is becoming increasingly important in the industrialized economies. Human capital. The literature has emphasized its the positive role on productivity lev ...
regulating capital flows at both ends: does it work?
regulating capital flows at both ends: does it work?

... required (upon request) to impose the same counter-cyclical capital charge on international banks’ exposures in a foreign jurisdiction as is being imposed by host regulator on domestic banks (up to 2.5 percent; implemented 2016-19) ...
W(h)ither the Stock of Public Capital?
W(h)ither the Stock of Public Capital?

... This paper maintains that the commonly used measure of the aggregate stock of public capital is conceptually divergent from the "true"' public capital input in private production technologies. Consequently, the published measure has the potential to misrepresent the historic growth profile of the pu ...
Multilateral Aspects of Managing the Capital Account
Multilateral Aspects of Managing the Capital Account

... discusses the analytical underpinnings of such principles, and attempts to draw implications from the analytics for the desirability of multilateral coordination of country policies. While a series of IMF policy notes and Board papers have discussed how an individual country, acting in isolation, sh ...
Should Financial Flows Be Regulated? Yes
Should Financial Flows Be Regulated? Yes

... In the aftermath of the collapse and the ensuing, catastrophic Second World War, governments in most of the world—with the reluctant blessing of the newly created International Monetary Fund (IMF)— adopted government controls (exchange and capital controls) to manage the international flows of money ...
Impact of New Capital Rule on Community Banks
Impact of New Capital Rule on Community Banks

... financial and administrative burden it would place on them. Although not successful in this endeavor, the industry can take solace as three key changes were made in the June 2012 proposals relating to 1) the risk-weighting of mortgages ; 2) having the ability to opt-out of AOCI; and 3) having the ab ...
PRESSE-INFORMATION Press-Release I Tiskové zprávy
PRESSE-INFORMATION Press-Release I Tiskové zprávy

... In addition to the above-mentioned financial instruments, NET4GAS has the option at any time to draw on a revolving credit line of up to EUR 100 million (CZK 2.750 bn) which can be flexibly used for capital projects and general corporate purposes. ...
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... • J-Curve Effect states that a decline in currency value will initially worsen the deficit before improvement. ...
Determinants of TOEFL Score: A Comparison of Linguistic
Determinants of TOEFL Score: A Comparison of Linguistic

... 1994 brought an abrupt end to capital flows to many Latin American economies and triggered speculative attacks on their currencies—dubbed as the “tequila effect” afterwards. ...
SEMINAR IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
SEMINAR IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

... developments, on the one hand, and international and domestic politics, on the other. It examines both theoretical perspectives on, and empirical evidence regarding stability of the international monetary system, causes and consequences of exchange rate fluctuations, and determinants of cross-border ...
Repowijoyo`s Dissertation: Legal Protection of Minority Shareholders
Repowijoyo`s Dissertation: Legal Protection of Minority Shareholders

... Minority shareholders is generally located in a weak position, because minority shareholders have substantial interests of a limited liability company, so the majority shareholders tend to monopolize the execution path of limited liability. Legal protection an important issue to be appointed in this ...
ASIA AND THE IMF
ASIA AND THE IMF

... get inflation down needs interest rates higher than those implied by the sum of the foreign interest rate and the rate at which the currency is expected to depreciate. In Chile the controls seem to have been successful for a time in allowing some monetar y policy independence, and also in shifting t ...
Executive Project Director
Executive Project Director

... ICB has supervisory responsibility for two Crown corporations: (1) the BC Immigrant Investment Fund Ltd. (BCIIF) which has invested more than $400 million in public infrastructure projects (schools, universities, hospitals, and research centres) and (2) the B.C. Renaissance Capital Fund Ltd. (BCRCF) ...
a bond or a stock?
a bond or a stock?

... I believe this is a better (and more honest) way to explain, promote and sell all forms of insurance to individuals who likely view the premiums as money poured down the drain. They purchased a hedge, not an investment. The concept of human capital is a powerful one that can guide many financial dec ...
Capital Account Liberalization
Capital Account Liberalization

... • Capital account liberalization needs to be wellsequenced and well-spaced as part of an integrated, comprehensive reform package, including reforms to strengthen the macroeconomic management framework and the financial system • It is critical to quickly but prudently establish the preconditions for ...
National Theatre
National Theatre

... The Arts have thrived during the recent stable period of revenue funding but the shortfall in lottery funding for capital has in recent years started to be felt again. This situation will become more acute with the planned cuts in Arts funding, during which period it is inevitable that the budgets s ...
Lecture 9
Lecture 9

... divided highways of the Interstate System and a period of rapid network expansions with its nonlinear effects. In the latter years, the rates of return to highway capital drops to levels closer to that of private capital, as the interstate highway system gets completed and a significant and increasi ...
CAPITAL GAINS TAX CUT WOULD BE POOR STIMULUS
CAPITAL GAINS TAX CUT WOULD BE POOR STIMULUS

... already at historically low levels, and also spook financial markets more generally. A temporary capital gains cut may be somewhat less likely to spark a large stock sell-off when the economy is weak and the stock market is already down, because investors will have fewer stocks that have appreciated ...
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... involved was a central part of the evolution of the crisis  Banking sector was often the main culprit Reinert/Windows on the World Economy, 2005 ...
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...  A continuous need to adapt monetary management to the emerging needs of a fast growing and increasingly open economy.  Financial deepening and increasing monetisation.  expansion of monetary aggregates departs from their traditional relationship with real GDP growth.  task of monetary managemen ...
MALAYSIA’S RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: Shankaran Nambiar*
MALAYSIA’S RESPONSE TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: Shankaran Nambiar*

... period was characterized by current account deficits, and also by strong FDI and short-term capital inflows. In this period of high growth, there were substantial trade and current account deficits. Yet, the massive inflows of portfolio investments and FDI more than compensated for the trade and cur ...
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Capital control

Capital controls are residency-based measures such as transaction taxes, other limits, or outright prohibitions that a nation's government can use to regulate flows from capital markets into and out of the country's capital account. These measures may be economy-wide, sector-specific (usually the financial sector), or industry specific (for example, “strategic” industries). They may apply to all flows, or may differentiate by type or duration of the flow (debt, equity, direct investment; short-term vs. medium- and long-term).Types of capital control include exchange controls that prevent or limit the buying and selling of a national currency at the market rate, caps on the allowed volume for the international sale or purchase of various financial assets, transaction taxes such as the proposed Tobin tax, minimum stay requirements, requirements for mandatory approval, or even limits on the amount of money a private citizen is allowed to remove from the country. There have been several shifts of opinion on whether capital controls are beneficial and in what circumstances they should be used.Capital controls were an integral part of the Bretton Woods system which emerged after World War II and lasted until the early 1970s. This period was the first time capital controls had been endorsed by mainstream economics. In the 1970s free market economists became increasingly successful in persuading their colleagues that capital controls were in the main harmful. The US, other western governments, and the big multilateral financial institutions (the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank) began to take an increasingly critical view of capital controls and persuaded many countries to abandon them to facilitate financial globalization.The Latin American debt crisis of the early 1980s, the East Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s, the Russian ruble crisis of 1998-99, and the global financial crisis of 2008, however, highlighted the risks associated with the volatility of capital flows, and led many countries—even those with relatively open capital accounts—to make use of capital controls alongside macroeconomic and prudential policies as means to damp the effects of volatile flows on their economies.In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, as capital inflows surged to emerging market economies, a group of economists at the IMF outlined the elements of a policy toolkit to manage the macroeconomic and financial-stability risks associated with capital flow volatility. The proposed toolkit allowed a role for capital controls. The study, as well as a successor study focusing on financial-stability concerns stemming from capital flow volatility, while not representing an IMF official view, were nevertheless influential in generating debate among policy makers and the international community, and ultimately in bringing about a shift in the institutional position of the IMF. With the increased use of capital controls in recent years, the IMF has moved to destigmatize the use of capital controls alongside macroeconomic and prudential policies to deal with capital flow volatility. More widespread use of capital controls, however, raises a host of multilateral coordination issues, as enunciated for example by the G-20, echoing the concerns voiced by John Maynard Keynes and Harry Dexter White more than six decades ago.
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