Asian Perspectives on Financial Sector Reforms and Regulation
By (Author) Masahiro Kawai
Edited by Eswar Prasad
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Brookings Institution
2nd November 2011
United States
General
Non Fiction
International economics
Political economy
Central / national / federal government policies
332.091724
Paperback
350
Width 9mm, Height 6mm
Although emerging economies as a group performed well during the global recession, weathering the recession better than advanced economies, there were sharp differences among them and across regions. The emerging economies of Asia had the most favorable outcomes, surviving the ravages of the global financial crisis with relatively modest declines in growth rates. In this informative volume, editors Masahiro Kawai and Eswar Prasad and their contributors discuss the major domestic macroeconomic and financial policy issues that could limit the growth potential of Asian emerging markets, and examined strategies to promote financial stability.
Masahiro Kawai is dean of the Asian Development Bank Institute. From 1998 to 2001, he was chief economist for the World Bank's East Asia and the Pacific Region, and he later was a professor at the University of Tokyo. Eswar S. Prasad holds the New Century Chair in International Economics at the Brookings Institution and is also the Tolani Senior Professor of Trade Policy at Cornell University and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. They are also the editors of Financial Market Regulation and Reform in Emerging Markets.