AbstractThe current financial crisis has its roots in global imbalances. But global imbalances in turn are caused by long-term factors determining international division of labor. Countries that have comparative advantages in manufacturing or are rich in natural resources end up with current account surpluses, and countries that have comparative advantages in finance end up exporting financial services and running current account deficits. However, a flux of large quantities of liquidities into the deficit countries caused asset bubbles and ultimately leads to the crisis. To cure global imbalances, structural changes have to happen on both sides of the imbalances, and international organizations should play a more active role
Abstract: In the context of globalization, global financial crisis reflected the evolution...
We examine whether the behavior of current account balances changed in the years preceding the globa...
In the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, South Korea, which had been one of the most successful economies...
The Global Imbalances that contributed to the financial crisis (2007-2010) are still present, and th...
Did global imbalances cause the financial crisis? A number of influential figures have argued that ...
Global imbalances, i.e. external positions of systemically important economies that reflect distorti...
Understanding the link between global macroeconomic imbalances and financial stability is critical n...
Despite the fact that international imbalances are not a new phenomenon, their development after the...
The implications of large current account surpluses and deficits (their summation globally is referr...
While briefly shrinking during the global crisis, global imbalances in trade and financial flows and...
The current financial crisis has its roots in global imbalances.But global imbalances in turn are ca...
In this paper we make three points about global imbalances. First, we show that the imbalances probl...
One of the main global economic concerns before the financial crisis in 2007/2008 was the emergence...
AbstractAlthough there have been surplus and deficit nations in the world for some decades, the 2008...
In 2009, demand in the world’s major economies fell, relative to its pre-crisis trend, by around US$...
Abstract: In the context of globalization, global financial crisis reflected the evolution...
We examine whether the behavior of current account balances changed in the years preceding the globa...
In the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, South Korea, which had been one of the most successful economies...
The Global Imbalances that contributed to the financial crisis (2007-2010) are still present, and th...
Did global imbalances cause the financial crisis? A number of influential figures have argued that ...
Global imbalances, i.e. external positions of systemically important economies that reflect distorti...
Understanding the link between global macroeconomic imbalances and financial stability is critical n...
Despite the fact that international imbalances are not a new phenomenon, their development after the...
The implications of large current account surpluses and deficits (their summation globally is referr...
While briefly shrinking during the global crisis, global imbalances in trade and financial flows and...
The current financial crisis has its roots in global imbalances.But global imbalances in turn are ca...
In this paper we make three points about global imbalances. First, we show that the imbalances probl...
One of the main global economic concerns before the financial crisis in 2007/2008 was the emergence...
AbstractAlthough there have been surplus and deficit nations in the world for some decades, the 2008...
In 2009, demand in the world’s major economies fell, relative to its pre-crisis trend, by around US$...
Abstract: In the context of globalization, global financial crisis reflected the evolution...
We examine whether the behavior of current account balances changed in the years preceding the globa...
In the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, South Korea, which had been one of the most successful economies...