An Institutional Perspective to Finance and Development as an Alternative to Financial Liberalisation
Authors:
Philip Arestis a;
Howard Stein b
| Affiliations: | a Cambridge Centre for Economic and Public Policy, University of Cambridge, and Levy Economics Institute, New York, USA |
| b University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA |
DOI:
10.1080/02692170500208459
Publication Frequency:
6 issues per year
Published in:
International Review of Applied Economics,
Volume
19,
Issue
4
October
2005
, pages 381
- 398
Subject:
International Economics;
Formats available:
HTML
(English)
:
PDF
(English)
View Article:
View Article (PDF)
View Article (HTML)
Abstract
This paper argues that financial liberalisation as practiced recently worldwide engenders widespread financial crises precisely because of the weak foundations of its theoretical framework and poor empirical performance. Financial liberalisation is critically evaluated on both theoretical and empirical grounds, which suggests that an alternative is vitally necessary. Based on institutional theory,a new approach is proposed the focus of which is on ways to affect financial and banking transformation that is more consistent with economic development. We demonstrate how this theoretical approach can be applied in the real world, and indeed how the theoretical propositions we put forward in this contribution, very different from those of financial liberalisation, produce a more developmentally oriented set of policies for the countries that are prepared to pursue them.
|
| Keywords: Financial liberalisation; financial crises; institutional-centric perspectives |
| JEL Classifications: O16; O23 |
| view references (53) |

Download Citation
CiteULike
Del.icio.us
BibSonomy
Connotea