Financialization and the World EconomyGerald A. Epstein The final section offers ideas for policy responses, including capital controls and securities transaction taxes."--BOOK JACKET. |
Contents
1 | |
3 | |
17 | |
Financialization Central Bank Policy and Labor Solidarity | 46 |
Financialization and the US Economy | 75 |
The Impact of Destructive Product Market Competition and Modern Financial Markets on Nonfinancial Corporation Performance in the Neoliberal Era | 77 |
Financialization in the Extreme | 111 |
Sources of Vulnerability in US Financial Markets | 149 |
Case Studies of Financialization and Economic Crisis | 241 |
10 The Rise of the New Money Doctors in Mexico | 243 |
11 The Making of the Turkish Financial Crisis | 260 |
Some Elements and Background | 289 |
13 International Liquidity and Growth Fluctuations in Brazil | 314 |
14 The Causes and Consequences of Neoliberal Restructuring in Postcrisis Korea | 334 |
Policy Perspectives | 355 |
15 Averting Crisis? Assessing Measures to Manage Financial Integration in Emerging Economies | 357 |
Financialization and the International Monetary System | 181 |
7 Financial Globalization Exchange Rates and International Trade | 183 |
8 The Eurodollar Market and the New Era of Global Financialization | 210 |
9 The Role of the International Monetary System in Financialization | 220 |
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Common terms and phrases
adjustment analysis Argentina Asian billion Blecker bonds borrowing Brazil capital controls capital flows central bank chaebol collapse comparative advantage competition contracts costs crises Crotty currency current account debt decade decline deficit derivatives developing countries dollar domestic earnings economic economists emerging economies emerging markets Epstein equity bubble equity market Eurodollar Eurodollar market exports external financial assets financial crisis financial institutions financial markets firms fiscal foreign exchange forward contract funds global growth rate households important increase industrial inflation inflows interest rate swap international financial International Monetary investment investors Keynes Korea labor liberalization loans macroeconomic Mexican neoliberal nonfinancial corporations OECD options payments percent political portfolio production profit rate real interest rates reduce rentier income rentier share requirements restructuring rise risk sector short-term speculative stabilization STET stock market swaps Tobin tax trade Treasury securities World World Bank
References to this book
New Deal Banking Reforms and Keynesian Welfare State Capitalism Ellen D. Russell No preview available - 2008 |