Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
INTERNATIONAL MONEY AND FINANCE 2nd edition
CONTENTS
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 The internationalization of finance
1.2 The chapters
2 Some Basic Concepts in International Finance
2.1 The exchange rate
Spot and forward rates
Foreign currency futures and options
2.2 The balance of payments accounts
The balance of payments and the money supply
2.3 Purchasing power parity
The real exchange rate
2.4 Floating exchange rates: prospect and retrospect
2.5 Exchange rate volatility
3 Spot and Forward Exchange Rates: Some more Basic Ideas
Introduction
3.1 The elasticities view of the exchange rate
Unstable exchange rates
Marshall-Lerner condition
The 'J' curve
Devaluation and the terms of trade
3.2 The forward exchange rate, arbitrage and pure speculation
Determination of the forward exchange rate by arbitragers and speculators
Risk premia
Uncovered interest arbitrage
Inter-temporal ppp
3.3 Covered interest rate parity - empirical evidence
3.4 Uncovered interest rate parity - empirical evidence
3.5 Real interest rate parity - empirical evidence
4 Income and the Balance of Payments
4.1 The foreign trade multiplier
4.2 An early view of economic management: the Swan diagram
4.3 The assignment problem
4.4 The absorption approach
Some policy considerations
4.5 Twin deficits
4.6 Foreign repercussions
Effect of an autonomous increase in US expenditure
Autonomous switch in US expenditure toward Japanese exports
4.7 Cooperative and 'locomotive' expansion to end a world recession
5 Macroeconomics in an Open Economy
5.1 The 'base-line' Mundell-Fleming model
The principle of effective market classification and the assignment problem
5.2 The large country case
5.3 Insulation and the MF model
5.4 Imperfect capital mobility and the MF model
5.5 Regressive expectations and monetary-fiscal policy
5.6 The J curve effect and regressive expectations
5.7 Wealth effects
5.8 Aggregate suplly, the real balance effect on the exchange rate in the MF model
Summary and conclusions
6 International Policy Coordination
Introduction
6.1 The two country Mundell-Fleming model and macroeconomic independence
Floating exchange rates
(i) Monetary, or beggar-thy-neighbour, policy
(ii) Fiscal policy
Fixed exchange rates
(i) monetary policy
(ii) fiscal policy
Imperfect capital mobility
Further extensions to the two country model of inter-dependence: the McKibben-Sachs model
6.2 The potential gains from policy coordination
The prisoner's dilemma
The Hamada diagram - targets and instruments revisted
6.3 Dynamic games, and the sustainability and reputation credibility of international cooperation
6.4 Some evidence on the potential benefits of coordination
6.5 Potential impediments to policy coordination and the appropriate form of such coordination
7 Purchasing Power Parity: Theory and Evidence
Introduction
7.1 The absolute and relative purchasing power parity concepts
Law of one price
Absolute ppp
Relative ppp
7.2 The efficient markets view of purchasing power parity
7.3 Further interpretation of purchasing power parity
7.4 Some further criticisms of purchasing power parity
Other criticisms
(1) Biased productivity: the Balassa-Samuelson thesis
(2) The demand side and non-traded goods
7.5 The empirical validity of purchasing power parity
A comparison of real and nominal exchange rates and tests of the law of one price
*Regression Based Tests of ppp and the time series properties of the real exchange rate
Concluding comments
8 Monetary Approach to the Balance of Payments
Introduction
8.1 What is so different about the monetary approach?
Different analytical approaches compared
8.2 The global monetarist model
Short-run dynamics
Devaluation
Small country assumption
Domestic credit expansion
Distribution of the world's money supply
The policy implications of the MABP
*8.3 Sterilization and the Reserve Offset Coefficient
Empirical framework
Empirical results
Problems with the empirical implementation of the MABP reduced form equations
8.4 The international transmission of inflation: some evidence
9 The Monetary View of Exchange Rate Determination
Introduction
9.1 The asset approach to the exchange rate
9.2 The flex-price monetary approach to the exchange rate
9.3 Introducing expectations
9.4 Rational speculative bubbles
9.5 The sticky-price monetary approach
9.6 Currency substitution
Currency substitution and the monetary approach
Currency substitution and monetary targeting
Currency substitution and inflation: the McKinnon hypothesis
*9.7 Empirical evidence on the monetary model
*9.8 More empirical evidence
*9.10 Empirical tests for the existence of speculative bubbles
Concluding comments
10 The Portfolio Balance Approach to the Determination of the
Exchange Rate
Introduction
Wither the current account?
10.1 The portfolio balance model
10.2 Open market purchase of bonds: monetary policy
Impact period
The short-run adjustment period and the move to the new long-run equilibrium
10.3 An increase in the supply of domestic bonds: fiscal policy
10.4 Asset preference shift
*10.5 Econometric evidence on the portfolio balance approach
10.6 Summary and concluding comments
11 Spot and Forward Exchange Rates and the Efficient Markets Hypothesis
Introduction
11.1 Spot and forward exchange rates
11.2 The efficient markets hypothesis and the forward market for foreign exchange
Some basic relationships
11.3 Econometric estimation of the EMH
Tests of the forward premium as an optimal predictor of the forward exchange rate
11.4 A risk premium story to explain why . may not by unity
A model of the risk premium
11.5 Empirically implementing equation 9.24
i) the CAPM/latent variables approach
ii) testing the othogonality condition directly
iii) ARCH models of the risk premium
The portfolio balance mean variabce approach to risk
Miscellaneous risk models
Concluding comments
12 Expectational Explanations for the Rejection of the Efficient Markets Hypothesis and the 'News"
12.1 Introduciton
12.2 Peso effects, rational speculative bubbles and econometric inference
12.3 Technical analysis and chartism
Deterministic chaos
12.4 Survey data, expectations and risk
12.5 The news approach to exchange rate modelling
12.6 Empirical studies of the news approach
12.7 The noise-trader paradigm
13 Historical Review of International Monetary Arrangementsœ
Introduction
13.1 The international gold standard
Increase in the home country's gold stock
Rise in the price of gold
Capital flows
Some other adjustment mechanisms under the gold standard
Anchoring the price level
13.2 The Bretton Woods system to 1971
Role of the IMF in the early days
Heyday of the Bretton Woods system
The IMF from 1970
Failure of the 'grand design' (1972©74)
13.3 The dollar standard
Early views on the dollar standard
Another view of the dollar standard
Reserve creation and the US and world price levels
The dollar standard 'on the booze'
13.4 The dollar sandard in an era of volatile exchange rate
expectations
Policy implications
14 The European Monetary System and Monetary Union
Introduction
14.1 Benefits and costs of a currency area
Benefits of a common currency
Costs of a common currency
14.2 Origins of the EMS
Operational details
14.3 How successful has the EMS been been?
14.4 The Delors Committee report on monetary union
Questions of the transition
14.5 Target zones
Target zones - evidence
Target zones - a modification and some further
evidence
14.6 Fiscal federalism
14.7 More on fiscal policy in a monetary union
Autonomy
Loss of the fiscal instrument?
Discipline
Coordination
15 International Money and Capital Flows
15.1 International money and capital flows
15.2 Eurobanking
Origin of the eurodollar market
The eurodollar credit multiplier
Eurobanks as a debt management system
The private ECU as a eurocurrency
Regulation: the Basle Accord
15.3 International bond markets
Growth of international bond markets
ECU bonds
15.4 Direct foreign investment
16 Developing Countries, Balance of Payments Adjustment and the IMF
Introduction
16.1 Developing Country exchange rate arrangements
16.2 The IMF: its role
16.3 The IMF's monetary approach to the balance of payments
16.4 New structuralist arguments against IMF adjustment policies
New structuralists versus the IMF: devaluation
Empirical evidence
Adjustment and income distribution
17 The Order of Liberalization in Developing Countries
Introduction
17.1 Distortions and economic performance
17.2 Unhappy experience with financial liberalization
17.3 The order of liberalization
18 The Formerly Centrally Planned Economies and the International Financial Economy
18.1 Introduction
18.2 Economic reform and the move currency convertibility
18.3 Catch©up scenarios and capital flows
Capital flows to FCPEs and developing countries
18.4 Effect on the world economy
18.5 Exchange rates
18.6 Dismantling the rouble zone
18.7 The order of liberalization in the FCPE
Second best policies
19 International Debt
Introduction
19.1 The debt problem
19.2 Growth of international debt
The debt service ratio
19.3 Debt and economic growth
Debt overhang
19.4 Capital flight
19.5 Governmental and national foreign indebtedness
19.6 The lenders' trap
19.7 Some debt-reform proposals
The free-rider issue
19.8 An international debt facility
20 International Monetary Reform
Introduction
20.1 Financing or adjustment?
Choosing an international monetary system
20.2 Designing an international monetary system
More on exchange rates and consistency
20.3 The costs and benefits of flexible exchange rates
20.4 Alternative plans for the reform of the IMS
The McKinnon plan
The extended target zone proposal
Bibliography
Index
Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
Previews available in: English
Edition | Availability |
---|---|
1 |
aaaa
|
Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [396]-425) and indexes.
Previous ed. published under title: International money. 1986.
Classifications
The Physical Object
ID Numbers
Community Reviews (0)
Feedback?November 16, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
December 29, 2019 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
December 4, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Added subjects from MARC records. |
December 10, 2009 | Created by WorkBot | add works page |