Credit creation in the Euromarket: alternative theories and implications for control
In: Occasional papers / Group of Thirty, 2
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In: Occasional papers / Group of Thirty, 2
World Affairs Online
In: Economica, Volume 40, Issue 158, p. 136
In: Routledge international studies in money and banking 57
In: Routledge international studies in money and banking, 57
The New International Monetary System brings together twelve original contributions by leading scholars and practitioners to a conference convened in May 2008 on the occasion of the retirement of Alexander Swoboda. The contributions are arranged in three main parts. Part I deals with the international financial architecture, Part II examines the ever-controversial role of exchange rate regimes and Part III takes stock of the conduct of monetary policy and the challenges posed by the inflation-targeting strategy. The chapters provide considered assessments of virtually all the hotly d.
World Affairs Online
This volume examines the implications of greater financial integration on the international monetary and financial system, and how it should be reformed. Various experts consider the most disruptive manifestations of instability and the appropriate policy responses, including exchange rate volatility and misalignments; unstable capital flows to emerging market economies; abrupt capital flow reversals; and private sector involvement in crisis resolution. The IMF's role in crisis prevention and resolution is also examined
In: The Per Jacobsson Lecture, 1991
World Affairs Online
In: Studies in contemporary economics
In: Economica, Volume 55, Issue 220, p. 553
World Affairs Online
In: Collection d'économie internationale 1
In: Proceedings of the ... conference of the International Center for Monetary and Banking Studies 1.1972
In: The Economic Journal, Volume 83, Issue 331, p. 928
In: Revue économique, Volume 26, Issue 5, p. 863
ISSN: 1950-6694
In: Occasional papers Occasional paper no. 193
This paper examines the consequences of heightened capital mobility and of the integration of developing economies in increasingly globalized markets for the exchange rate regimes of the industrial, developing, and transition economies. It builds upon previous studies by IMF staff on various aspects of the exchange rate arrangements of member countries, consistent with the IMF's role of surveillance over its members' exchange rate policies