Boom-Bust Cycles and Financial Liberalization

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Product Details
Price
$30.00
Publisher
MIT Press
Publish Date
Pages
168
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.46 inches | 0.67 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780262526241

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About the Author

Aaron Tornell is Professor of Economics at UCLA, an NBER Research Fellow, and a CESifo Research Fellow.

Reviews
--Ronald I. McKinnon, William D. Eberle Professor of International Economics, Stanford University
--Assaf Razin, Bernard Schwartz Professor of Global Markets, Tel Aviv University, and Friedman Professor of International Economics, Cornell University
" This book by Tornell and Westermann is an excellent starting point for public-policy debates on the pros and cons of financial liberalization in developing countries. They put forward a provocative argument: welfare costs of financial crises are, on average, outweighed by the benefits of high growth. The authors provide state-of-the-art theoretical analysis and supporting evidence to illustrate, in a novel way, the workings of an unconventional credit channel responsible for boom-bust cycles." --Assaf Razin, Bernard Schwartz Professor of Global Markets, Tel Aviv University, and Friedman Professor of International Economics, Cornell University
" The authors successfully resolve what has been the most vexing problem in development finance: should middle-income countries liberalize domestic interest rates and free international capital flows in the presence of domestic credit market distortions and moral hazard from government rescue operations? Tornell and Westermann show that financial fragility, and the possibility of major crashes, naturally increases with such financial liberalization. But such liberalization also stimulates growth, albeit unevenly, over the longer term. A must-read for students of development finance." --Ronald I. McKinnon, William D. Eberle Professor of International Economics, Stanford University
& quot; This book by Tornell and Westermann is an excellent starting point for public-policy debates on the pros and cons of financial liberalization in developing countries. They put forward a provocative argument: welfare costs of financial crises are, on average, outweighed by the benefits of high growth. The authors provide state-of-the-art theoretical analysis and supporting evidence to illustrate, in a novel way, the workings of an unconventional credit channel responsible for boom-bust cycles.& quot; --Assaf Razin, Bernard Schwartz Professor of Global Markets, Tel Aviv University, and Friedman Professor of International Economics, Cornell University
& quot; The authors successfully resolve what has been the most vexing problem in development finance: should middle-income countries liberalize domestic interest rates and free international capital flows in the presence of domestic credit market distortions and moral hazard from government rescue operations? Tornell and Westermann show that financial fragility, and the possibility of major crashes, naturally increases with such financial liberalization. But such liberalization also stimulates growth, albeit unevenly, over the longer term. A must-read for students of development finance.& quot; --Ronald I. McKinnon, William D. Eberle Professor of International Economics, Stanford University
"This book by Tornell and Westermann is an excellent starting point for public-policy debates on the pros and cons of financial liberalization in developing countries. They put forward a provocative argument: welfare costs of financial crises are, on average, outweighed by the benefits of high growth. The authors provide state-of-the-art theoretical analysis and supporting evidence to illustrate, in a novel way, the workings of an unconventional credit channel responsible for boom-bust cycles."--Assaf Razin, Bernard Schwartz Professor of Global Markets, Tel Aviv University, and Friedman Professor of International Economics, Cornell University
"The authors successfully resolve what has been the most vexing problem in development finance: should middle-income countries liberalize domestic interest rates and free international capital flows in the presence of domestic credit market distortions and moral hazard from government rescue operations? Tornell and Westermann show that financial fragility, and the possibility of major crashes, naturally increases with such financial liberalization. But such liberalization also stimulates growth, albeit unevenly, over the longer term. A must-read for students of development finance."--Ronald I. McKinnon, William D. Eberle Professor of International Economics, Stanford University