432 Pages 77 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    432 Pages 77 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book examines the subject of Development Finance, or more specifically how financial systems can help or hinder the process of human development. As an expert in this field, Stephen Spratt reviews the components of the domestic and international financial systems, and considers reform options objectively against the central goal of human development. The result is a combination of orthodox and more innovative approaches, which provides a thorough grounding in development finance theory and practice in the 21st century. Topics covered in the book include:

     

    • The Millennium Development Goals
    • Financial crises and international capital flows
    • The role of the private sector
    • Microfinance.


    Focusing on the roles of the World Bank and the IMF and with a host of case studies and real world examples from Asia, Africa and Latin America as well as the "transition" economies of Eastern Europe, the author examines developing countries’ engagement with the international financial system and its influence on the process of human development, both positive and negative.

    Chapter 1: An Introduction to the Financial System in Theory and in Practice.  Chapter 2: Finance, Poverty, Development and Growth.  Chapter 3: Financial Repression, Liberalisation and Growth.  Chapter 4: The Domestic Financial System: An Overview.  Chapter 5: Reforming the Domestic Financial System: Options and Issues.  Chapter 6: The External Financial System: Characteristics and Trends.  Chapter 7: The External Financial System (2): Debt and Financial Crises.  Chapter 8: The International Financial Architecture: Evolution, Key Features and Proposed Reforms.  Chapter 9: Development Finance and the Private Sector: Driving the Real Economy.  Chapter 10: Finance for Development: What Do We Know?

    Biography

    Stephen Spratt is a director of the new economics foundation, a UK based think tank. Previously he lectured in development finance at the University of Reading, has worked in the City of London’s financial markets and was a researcher at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex.

    "While many authors have previously examined the causes of economic development, few have focused directly and extensively on its relationship with financial systems. Spratt takes this unique angle in his new book, which provides ample coverage of both theory and practice in the field of development finance. … a valuable reference for scholars and practitioners in this new emerging field. Highly recommended." – CHOICE (July 2009 Vol. 46) by H.A. Faruq, Xavier University