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Finance, and monetary policies in the globalized market capitals in economic growth …... and the problem of controlling a “sensitive” commodity Histories of capital markets and of financial and monetary rules overlap being the former (capitals) strongly influenced by the latter (rules)
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Finance, and monetary policies in the globalized market a stylized timeline: (1) before 1870: strict rules and minor integration (2) 1870-1914: a multilateral system of rules fosters high integration (3) 1914-1945: new restrictions and a trend of capital market dis-integration (4) 1945-1971: a new multilateral set of norms supports a slow integration (5) post-1971: deregulation and the globalization of capital markets
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Finance, and monetary policies in the globalized market once again, a non-linear pattern determined by three variables that hardly can be combined together (1) international freedom of capital movements (2) a fixed/stable exchange rate (3) an independent economic policy one variable must be sacrificed
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19th Century: the birth of a global capital market 16th-18th c.: finance’s tecniques transfer and a slow volume increase 1870-1914: market-integration London the financial capital consistent increase in capital flows expansion to Europe and W. offshhoots evidence of integration: convergence in interest rates
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19th Century: the Age of Gold standard and central banks two pillars: gold standard and national central banks (1) The gold standard a call for a common monetary standard: Conference of Paris (1867) in the framework of the post Cobden- Chevalier high increase of international trade
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19th Century: the Age of Gold standard and central banks (1) The gold standard ideas in the air: (a) monetary coordination does not threat international trade; (b) an extension of a broader trend to economic standardization
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19th Century: the Age of Gold standard and central banks (1) The gold standard no formal agreement: gold vs bi-metallic monetary standard gold becomes the standard through market integration 1879: Gold standard de facto
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19th Century: the Age of Gold standard and central banks (2) National central bank two main functions: bank to the government steward of the financial system = “lender of last resort” c) coordination among National banks: an idea that slowly becomes common
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Between two wars: the disintegration of capital markets a framework of competitive policies involving finance and currency global capital considered responsible for 1929 crisis a decrease in volumes and a non- convergent trend in interest rates the gold standard “great escape”
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Before 1929: the failed attempt bad legacies from WWI: failure of the Gold standard competitive devaluation war reparations c) searching for a multilateral agreement: Brussels and Genoa conferences
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Before 1929: the failed attempt main issue: fighting currency depreciation to foster free-trade solutions put forward: (1) gold convertibility, (2) central banks independency, (3) discipline in taxation, (4) assistance for countries with depreciated currency problem: outdated framework (re- establish the prewar model)
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Before 1929: the failed attempt minor results and big failures: no international trading system rebuilding... yet, opens to future developments a wider discipline of a multilateral free-trade, including: fiscal policies multilateral finance institutions BIS: a first “world bank” candidate
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During the “Great Depression” 1929 crisis and BIS weakness London Conference (1933): the last call for multilateral discipline a failure determined by crossfire vetos and lack of leadership
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After WW 2: the rebuilding of international capital networks until the 1960s, commodity market integration is not coupled by finance because capital flows are kept under control massive public investments (ERP) but small space for private capital
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Bretton Woods and the Age of multilateral institutions a recap of Bretton Woods agreements new leaders of world economy: USA (and UK) a negative target to aim: “bad” financial and monetary policies of the loosers
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Bretton Woods and the Age of multilateral institutions a different framework: no immediate crisis a clear target: reconstructing multilateral free-trade spillovers: a discipline of monetary and financial policies the birth of multilateral institutions
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Bretton Woods and the Age of multilateral institutions sparring partners negotiate to reduce agreements impact obtaing a period of transition for par value system enforcement increasing IMF’s and World Bank’s resources (and later ERP) delaying the return of fixed exchange rates among currencies
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After 1971: a new period of capital market integration after the 1960s continuing growth of international capital movements a process coupled by liberalization investments (public and private) flow around involving the periphery evidence of strong integration, rapid convergence in interest rates
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The post-1971 era: floating currencies and financial crises the “Nixon package” (1971): dismantling BW monetary system a way to prevent protectionism with effects on monetary discipline: a “stable system of rates” instead of a “system of stable rates” bi-lateral agreements replacing multilateral institutions illusion: no backlash on foreign trade
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The post-1971 era: floating currencies and financial crises features of the new monetary “non-system”: fixed exchange rates in small countries Europe’s mini-Bretton Woods: EMS’ “monetary Snake” coordinated devaluations: Plaza Hotel (1985) the Louvre (1987) agreements
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The post-1971 era: floating currencies and financial crises missing the point: an uncontrolled growth of capital flows the first sign: the Latin American debt crisis (1982) and its heavy backlash on trade the following crises: Mexico (1994-95); Asian crisis (1997- 98); Wall Street crisis (2008-?)
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Recent trends in financial and monetary policies: the late 20th c. a summary of main trends in finance and currency exchange: integration of financial market new tools and new players no barriers, no controls, no national solutions
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Recent trends in financial and monetary policies: the late 20th c. a summary of main trends in finance and currency exchange: the new strategy of existing multilateral institution IMF tools: conditional loans the widening of pre-conditions asked for
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