Global Finance in Emerging Market Economies

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Author_Todd Knoop
banking crisis analysis
capital flow regulation
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development economics
East Asian Crisis
economic development
emerging economies
Emerging Market Economies
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External Finance Premium
finance
financial development
financial inclusion
financial macroeconomics
Financial Repression
Financial Repression Policies
Foreign Capital Flows
Gdp Growth
global finance
Inflation Target
Informal Finance
international finance
international monetary economics
Islamic Finance
macroeconomics
market economy
MENA Country
MENA Region
microcredit
Middle East
monetary economics
monetary policy emerging markets
money and banking
Net Private Capital Inflows
Non-performing Loans
Pe Rc
Per-capita Gdp
Prudential Regulation
Real Exchange Rate
Reducing Bank Risk
regional financial systems comparison
South America
sovereign debt policy
Sovereign Risk Premiums
SSA Country
Sub-Saharan Africa
Undervalued Exchange Rates
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415501217
  • Weight: 770g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Emerging market economies have accounted for three quarters of world economic growth and more than half of world output over the last decade. But the energy and ideas inherent in emerging economies cannot generate growth by themselves without resources to support them — and first among these resources is money which is needed to purchase the capital and knowhow that turn ideas and initiative into income. How do emerging economies rich in resources other than money get money? This question encapsulates what emerging market finance is all about, and why finance is absolutely crucial to economic development.

In emerging countries, most of the population does not have access to bank accounts or financial markets to save or borrow. The result is that many firms cannot get access to financial resources to grow, while households cannot borrow and save in ways that could reduce the riskiness and poverty of their lives. Even those that do have access to formal finance find that credit is unreliable and expensive. These financial failures limit growth and also increase the frequency of costly financial crises.

These issues, and many more like them, mean that finance in emerging economies is different and often more complex than the view presented in most textbooks, where finance is only considered from the perspective of wealthy, developed economies. This book addresses this failure by focusing on the important characteristics of financial systems in emerging market economies and their differences from those in developed countries. This book surveys both theoretical and empirical research on finance in emerging economies, as well as reviewing numerous case studies. The final chapters describe and compare financial systems within the four different regions that encompass most emerging economies: Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and South America.

Todd A. Knoop is Richard and Norma Small Professor of Economics and Business at Cornell College, USA.

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