Financial Crises in Emerging Markets by Reuven Glick (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco)
This book looks at numerous financial crises, beginning with Mexico in 19945, the Asian crisis of 19978, and the crises in Russia, Brazil, and other Latin American countries in 19989. Such contemporary crises illustrate the risks of financial volatility and macroeconomic instability during the process of economic growth and development. They also raise issues regarding the management of risks associated with liberalization and global integration, particularly in financial markets. Concerns about the implications of international capital flows for developing countries have grown with the sharply increased volume of these flows since the late 1980s. The essays in this volume provide analysis and evidence on the determinants of currency and banking crises in emerging markets, the specific roles of capital flows and the financial sector, and the appropriateness of various policy responses.