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基本説明
Comparing the European Monetary Union with the dollarization (formal and informal) process in Latin America.
Full Description
This book deals with the economic consequences of monetary integration, which has long been dominated by the Optimal Currency Area (OCA) paradigm. In this model, money is perceived as having developed from a private sector cost minimization process to facilitate transactions. Not surprisingly, the book argues, the main advantage of monetary integration in the OCA context is the reduction of transaction costs, yet the validity of OCA to analyze processes of monetary integration seems to be limited at best. The contributors in this volume try to go beyond the OCA model and understand the political economy of monetary integration by comparing the European Monetary Union with the dollarization (formal and informal) process in Latin America. The contributors, many of whom are leading lights, reflect the disagreements and the changing views on the proper monetary arrangements in a globalized world and suggest that monetary integration and dollarization are not the solution for the great majority of countries around the world.
Monetary Integration and Dollarization brings together mainstream and heterodox views of monetary integration and uses the European and North American experiences as a guide for the discussion of dollarization in developing countries. It will appeal to scholars, researchers and policy makers in the fields of financial and international economics.
Contents
Contents:
Foreword
Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira
Monetary Arrangements in a Globalizing World: An Introduction
Matías Vernengo
PART I: EUROPEAN MONETARY UNION
1. Reflections on the Experience of the Euro: Lessons for the Americas
Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer
2. European Experiences of Currency Boards: Estonia, Lithuania, Bulgaria and Bosnia and Herzegovina
Jean-François Ponsot
3. The Lessons of the European Monetary Union
Alain Parguez
PART II: DOLLARIZATION IN NORTH AMERICA?
4. Does NAFTA Move North America Towards a Common Currency Area?
William C. Gruben and Jahyeong Koo
5. Dollarization and Illegal Immigration: Implications for NAFTA
Susan Pozo
6. Is the Canadian Dollar Destined to Disappear? A Critical Perspective
Mario Seccareccia
7. Float, Fix or Joint? The Options for Canadian Foreign Exchange Policy
Ronald G. Bodkin
PART III: EMERGING MARKETS AND THE FINANCIAL ARCHITECTURE
8. Can Emerging Markets Float? Should They Inflation Target?
Barry Eichengreen
9. Integrating Uneven Partners: The Destabilizing Effects of Financial Liberalization and Internationalization of Latin American Economics
Rogério Studart
10. Exchange Rate Regimes and the Need for Elements for a New International Financial Architecture
Stephany Griffith-Jones
11. Capital Flows to Emerging Markets under the Flexible Dollar Standard: A Critical View Based on the Brazilian Experience
Carlos Medeiros and Franklin Serrano
PART IV: FINAL REFLECTIONS
12. From Capital Controls to Dollarization: American Hegemony and the US Dollar
Matías Vernengo
13. A Framework for Analysing Dollarization
Paul Davidson
14. Dollarization in Latin America: 2004 and Beyond
Kenneth P. Jameson
15. Monetary Integration and Dollarization: What Are the Lessons?
Alcino F. Câmara Neto and Matías Vernengo
Index



