Select a site...
TWN - Biosafety Information Centre
TWN - Finance Information Centre
TWN - Main Site
TWN Indonesia
TWN Chinese
About Us
|
Contact
|
Sitemap
Home
All Publications
Log In
or
Register
Advanced Search
Your cart is empty
$ US Dollar
Currency:
English
echo HEADER_LANGUAGES;?>
Browse TWN Books
International Trade
Finance & Economy
Intellectual Property Rights
Biotechnology/Biosafety
Biodiversity
Climate Change
Environment
Development
Health/Medical
Others
Browse TWN Series
Antimicrobial Resistance
Trade & Development
Global Economy
Intellectual Property Rights
Biodiversity, Knowledge & Rights
Biotechnology & Biosafety
Climate Change
Environment & Development
Gender
Important Links
Third World Resurgence
Third World Economics
South-North Development Monitor (SUNS)
Browse Books by Other Publishers
Other Publishers
Newsletter
Enter your email address to subscribe to our Newsletter.
HTML
TEXT-Only
Information
Shipping & Returns
Privacy Notice
Conditions of Use
Contact Us
Site Map
Discount Coupons
Home
::
Browse TWN Books
::
Finance & Economy
:: Reforming the Global Financial Architecture: Issues and Proposals
Reforming the Global Financial Architecture: Issues and Proposals
Product 7/20
USD 12.00
Publisher:
UNCTAD, TWN & Zed Books
ISBN:
983-9747-70-3
Year:
2002
No. of pages:
156
Size of book:
14.5cm x 21.5cm
Author:
Yilmaz Akyüz
About the Book
The increased frequency and virulence of international currency and financial crises suggest that instability has become global and systemic. This volume, which embodies the most recent analysis formulated in the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), argues that strengthening of institutions and arrangements at the international level is essential if the threat of such crisies is to be reduced and if they are to be better managed when they do occur. Yet its review of recent measures shows how little has been done to establish effective global arrangements that address the main concerns of developing countires. Instead what reform has taken place has emphasized only what should be done by national institutions, and even then has failed to adopt an even-handed approach between debtors and creditors.
The book reviews the initiatives undertaken so far and contrasts them with the kind of measures proposed to address systemic failures and global instability. The proposals draw on the latest ideas being discussed amongst leading economists and embrace four main areas:
* Rules and institutions to set standards and regulate international capital flows;
* The exchange rate system, in particular whether developing countries can both maintain an open capital account and attain exchange rate stability when major reserve currencies are subject to frequent gyrations and misalignments and international capital movements are extremely unstable;
* A more orderly workout with improved mechanisms to resolve the continuing international debt problem;
* Reform of the IMF, especially surveillance, conditionality, the provision of international liquidity, and its potential function as a lender of last resort.
The book concludes with the question of the management of financial crises when they do occur and burden sharing, including the involvement of the private sector.
Add to Cart:
This product was added to our catalog on Tuesday 14 February, 2012.
Customers who bought this product also purchased...
The International Financial Architecture and Free Trade Agreements
|
Home
|
About Us
|
Contact
|
Sitemap
|
Copyright © 2011 Third World Network. All Rights Reserved