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2 - Costs and benefits of financial globalisation: concepts, evidence and implications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

John Williamson
Affiliation:
Senior Fellow Institute for International Economics, Washington, DC
Geoffrey R. D. Underhill
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Xiaoke Zhang
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Amsterdam
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Summary

In order to have a rational discussion of what should be done to redesign the international financial architecture, it seems natural to start by making sure that we all agree on the basic analytical framework, on what we mean by financial globalisation and what we judge the qualitative nature of its costs and benefits to be. That is what I shall take as my terms of reference in this chapter.

The term ‘financial globalisation’ is generally taken to mean the integration of capital markets across countries, and, specifically, the belief that this now encompasses most of the world. It does not include monetary globalisation, meaning the global use of a single currency. In fact, outside Europe, there has until recently been almost no sign of monetary integration. It remains to be seen whether the current flurry of interest in dollarisation will translate into the beginning of a widespread movement to curtail the number of currencies.

But for the moment it is the bond market rather than the money market that is unified, in the sense that agents in one political jurisdiction have become willing to hold an unlimited proportion of their portfolio in securities issued in a different country. Similarly, borrowers have become willing to see an unlimited proportion of the securities they issue held by the residents of a different political jurisdiction.

Type
Chapter
Information
International Financial Governance under Stress
Global Structures versus National Imperatives
, pp. 41 - 59
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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