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Japan, South Korea, Mexico, France, and Spain once exercised significant control over the allocation of credit, and used that control to facilitate economic adjustment and industrial development. In the 1980s all that changed. Why and how these states dismantled their activist credit policies is the subject of Capital Ungoverned. The volume brings together five specialists in the economics and politics of these various states to assess the internal and global changes that prompted them to adopt financial liberalization.
Comparison reveals the distinctive political and institutional logic that guided liberalization in each country—from the role of a newly dominant capitalist class in Korea to the replacement of state financing by private financing and self-financing in Japan, from the maneuvers of the banking establishment in Spain to attempts to attract foreign capital in Mexico. At the same time, these cases clarify the importance of international factors, in particular the shifts that occurred in U.S. policy as it sought to respond to the effects of uneven growth in the world economy.
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Capital Ungoverned: Liberalizing Finance in Interventionist States
December 1996, Cornell University Press
Paperback
in English
080148281X 9780801482816
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September 13, 2021 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
June 19, 2020 | Edited by J.B. | Edited without comment. |
April 24, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Fixed duplicate goodreads IDs. |
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