Financial Liberalization

How Far, How Fast?

Joseph E Stiglitz editor Gerard Caprio, Jr editor Patrick Honohan editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:8th Oct '01

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Financial Liberalization cover

This volume provides a rounded view of financial liberalization after the collapses in East Asia.

This volume addresses one of the most topical and controversial issues in banking and financial policy. It explains why governments have felt the need to liberalize banking and finance, for example, by privatizing banks and allowing interest rates to be set by the market.The goal of this volume is to bring a more broad-based empirical experience than has been customary to the theoretical debate on how financial systems should be managed. This is achieved not only with cross-country economic studies, but also with an account of carefully chosen and widely contrasting country cases, drawn from Europe, Latin America, Africa, East and South Asia and the former Soviet Union. The widespread financial crises of recent years have all too dramatically illustrated the shortcomings of financial policy under liberalization. The complexity of the issues mocks any idea that a standard liberalization template will be universally effective. The evidence here described confirms that policy recommendations need to take careful account of country conditions. The volume is the outcome of a research project sponsored by the World Bank's Development Economics Research Group.

  • Winner of Nobel Prize for Economics 2001

ISBN: 9780521803694

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm

Weight: 640g

320 pages