1st Edition

Financial Development, Economic Crises and Emerging Market Economies

Edited By Faruk Ulgen Copyright 2017
    244 Pages 27 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    258 Pages 27 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Recurrent crises in emerging markets and in advanced economies in the last decades cast doubt about the ability of financial liberalization to meet the aims of sustainable economic growth and development. The increasing importance of financial markets and financial efficiency criterion over economic decisions and policies since the 1980s laid down the conditions of the development process of emerging market economies. Numerous crises experienced thereafter gave rise to flourishing work on the links between financialization and economic development. Several decades of observations and lessons can now be integrated into economic and econometric models to give more sophisticated and multivariable approaches to financial development with respect to growth and development issues. In the markets-based and private-enterprise dominated world economy, two conditions for a successful growth-enhancing financial evolution can at least be brought fore: macroeconomic stability and consistent supervision.

    But even after the 2007-2008 global crisis, economists do not agree on the meaning of those conditions. For liberal and equilibrium-market economists, good finance and supervision mean market-friendly structures while for institutionalists, post-Keynesian and Marxist economists, good finance and supervision must lie in collectively designed and managed public structures. Drawing heavily on the tumultuous crises of the 1990s-2000s, this book argues that those experiences can shed light on such a crucial issue and lead economic theory and policy to go beyond the blindness of efficient free markets doctrine to economic catastrophes. It also points to new challenges to global stability in the wake of reconfiguration of international financial arena under the weight of major emerging market economies.

    Preface

    James K. Galbraith

    Introduction: Financial Development: The Sword Of Damocles Hanging Over The Process Of Economic Development

    Faruk Ülgen

    Chapter 1. Financial Liberalization, Crises And Policy Implications

    Philip Arestis

    Chapter 2. Global Financing: A Bad Medicine For Developing Countries

    Joaquín Arriola

    Chapter 3. Financial Development, Instability And Some Confused Equations

    Faruk Ülgen

    Chapter 4. Underdeveloped Financial Markets Infrastructure Of Emerging Market Economies. Assessment Of Underlying Challenges And Suggested Policy Responses

    Shazia GHANI

    Chapter 5. Towards De-Financialization

    Malcolm Sawyer

    Chapter 6. A Common Currency For The Common Good

    Sergio Rossi

    Chapter 7. A Capital Market Without Banks. Lending And Borrowing In Hennaarderadeel, Friesland, 1537–1555

    Merijn KNIBBE And Paul Borghaerts

    Chapter 8. Financial Liberalization, Financial Development And Instability In Emerging Economies: What Lessons For The Franc Zone?

    Aboubakar Sidiki Cisse

    Chapter 9. Depositor Myopia And Banking Sector Behavior

    Ozan Bakis, Fatih Karanfil And Sezgin Polat

    Chapter 10. Dollarization And Financial Development: The Experience Of LA Countries

    Eugenia Correa And Alicia Girón

    Chapter 11. Financialization In Brazil: A Paper Tiger, With Atomic Teeth?

    Pierre Salama

    Chapter 12. National And Supra-National Financial Regulatory Architecture: Transformations Of The Russian Financial System In The Post-Soviet Period

    Nadezhda N. Pokrovskaia

    Chapter 13: Minsky In Beijing: Shadow Banking, Credit Expansion And Debt Accumulation In China

    Yan Liang

    Biography

    Faruk Ülgen is Associate Professor, Grenoble Faculty of Economics, Director of the Department of International Relations and Conventions, and Head of the Department of Economics of the Branch Campus of Valence of the University Grenoble Alpes, France.