Fixing Financial Crises in the 21st Century

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Category=KCL
Category=KCM
clause
Co-ordination Game
collective
Collective Action Clauses
crisis
debt
Debtor Moral Hazard
Emerging Market Countries
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financial crisis resolution strategies
globalisation impact economics
hazard
Holdout Creditor
IMF Article
IMF Board
IMF Conditionality
IMF crisis management
IMF Director
IMF Lending
IMF Loan
IMF Member
IMF Programme
IMF Resource
IMF Role
IMF Staff
IMF's Surveillance
IMF’s Surveillance
International Bankruptcy Court
International Bankruptcy Procedures
international monetary policy
Liquidity Crises
Mixed Strategy Equilibrium
moral
Perfect Equilibria
private sector involvement
resolution
restructuring
SDRM
sovereign
sovereign debt restructuring
Sovereign Debt Workouts
statutory resolution mechanisms

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415327602
  • Weight: 830g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2004
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Financial crises have dogged the international monetary system over recent years. They have impoverished millions of people around the world, especially within developing countries. And they have called into question the very process of globalisation. Yet there remains no intellectual consensus on how best to avert such crises – much less resolve them. Policymakers stand at a crossroads.

This volume summarises and evaluates these issues, drawing on contributions by prominent international experts in the field. It considers whether the IMF may have actually fanned the flames of future crises through its lending decisions. It assesses the contribution made by private creditors in resolving past crises – and asks what mechanisms might best be used to involve private creditors in the future. It also assesses the merits of two recent competing blueprints for architectural reform – the so-called contractual and statutory approaches to crisis resolution.

These issues will shape the debate on the future of the international monetary system over the next decade and, probably, beyond. For although crises may always be with us, better public policy can surely help mitigate their future cost and incidence.

With an impressive array of internationally based contributors, this book will deserve a place on the bookshelves of economists and policy-makers in both the official and private sectors.

Andrew G. Haldane is Head of International Finance at the Bank of England.