Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Nouriel Roubini and Marc Uzan
PART I CAUSES OF THE CRISIS: CASE STUDIES
A General
1. Stanley Fischer (1999), ‘Reforming the International Financial
System’
2. Policy Development and Review Department (2003), ‘The Balance
Sheet Approach and its Applications at the Fund’
3. Nouriel Roubini and Brad Setser (2004), ‘New Nature of Emerging
Market Crises’
B Mexico
4. Jeffrey Sachs, Aaron Tornell and Andrés Velasco (1996), ‘The
Collapse of the Mexican Peso: What Have We Learned?’
C Asia
5. Steven Radelet and Jeffrey D. Sachs (1998), ‘The East Asian
Financial Crisis: Diagnosis, Remedies, Prospects’
6. Giancarlo Corsetti, Paolo Pesenti and Nouriel Roubini (1999),
‘What Caused the Asian Currency and Financial Crisis?’
D Russia
7. Abbigail J. Chiodo and Michael T. Owyang (2002), ‘A Case Study
of a Currency Crisis: The Russian Default of 1998’
E Brazil
8. Morris Goldstein (2003), ‘Debt Sustainability, Brazil, and the
IMF’
F Argentina
9. Ricardo Hausmann and Andrés Velasco (2002), ‘Hard Money's Soft
Underbelly: Understanding the Argentine Crisis’
G Contagion and Twin Banking Crises
10. Rudiger Dornbusch, Yung Chul Park and Stijn Claessens (2000),
‘Contagion: Understanding How It Spreads’
11. Graciela L. Kaminsky and Carmen M. Reinhart (1999), ‘The Twin
Crises: The Causes of Banking and Balance-of-Payments Problems’
PART II CAUSES OF CRISES: THEORY
A Liquidity Runs Models
12. Roberto Chang and Andrés Velasco (1999), ‘Liquidity Crises in
Emerging Markets: Theory and Policy’
B Moral-Hazard Related Papers
13. Paul Krugman (1998), ‘What Happened to Asia?’
14. Giancarlo Corsetti, Paolo Pesenti and Nouriel Roubini (1999),
‘Paper Tigers? A Model of the Asian Crisis’
C Balance Sheet Effects Models
15. Paul Krugman (1999), ‘Balance Sheets, the Transfer Problem, and
Financial Crises’
16. Guillermo A. Calvo (1998), ‘Capital Flows and Capital-Market
Crises: The Simple Economics of Sudden Stops’
17. Luis Felipe Céspedes, Roberto Chang and Andres Velasco (2000),
‘Balance Sheets and Exchange Rate Policy’
Name Index
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editors to both volumes appears in Volume
I
PART I INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL ARCHITECTURE REFORM: CRISIS
PREVENTION AND RESOLUTION
A Architecture Reform
1. Kenneth Rogoff (1999), ‘International Institutions for Reducing
Global Financial Instability’
2. Halifax Summit (1995), ‘Halifax Summit Communiqué’
3. Robert E. Rubin (1998), ‘Strengthening the Architecture of the
International Financial System’
4. Lawrence H. Summers (2000), ‘International Financial Crises:
Causes, Prevention, and Cures’
5. Martin Feldstein (1999), ‘A Self Help Guide for Emerging
Markets’
B IMF Reform
6. Lawrence H. Summers (1999), ‘The Right Kind of IMF for a Stable
Global Financial System’
7. Martin Feldstein (1998), ‘Refocusing the IMF’
8. Joseph E. Stiglitz (2002), ‘The IMF’s Other Agenda’
9. Allan H. Meltzer (2000), ‘Statement of Allan H. Meltzer on the
Report of the International Financial Institution Advisory
Commission Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs’
C Crisis Resolution and PSI (Official Policy and Practice)
10. William R. Cline (2002), ‘“Private Sector Involvement” in
Financial Crisis Resolution: Definition, Measurement, and
Implementation’
11. Report of G7 Finance Ministers to the Köln Economic Summit
(1999), ‘Strengthening the International Financial
Architecture’
12. Special Committee on Crisis Prevention and Resolution in
Emerging Markets (2001), ‘Policy Statement’
PART II BAIL-INS VERSUS BAILOUTS: SDRM, CAC, CODE OF GOOD
CONDUCT
A Crisis Resolution
13. Barry Eichengreen (2003), ‘Restructuring Sovereign Debt’
14. Kenneth Rogoff and Jeromin Zettelmeyer (2002), ‘Early Ideas on
Sovereign Bankruptcy Reorganization: A Survey’
15. Anne Krueger (2002), ‘New Approaches to Sovereign Debt
Restructuring: An Update on Our Thinking’, Address given at the
Conference on “Sovereign Debt Workouts: Hopes and Hazards”
16. John B. Taylor (2002), ‘Sovereign Debt Restructuring: A U.S.
Perspective’, Remarks at the Conference “Sovereign Debt Workouts:
Hopes and Hazards?”
17. Nouriel Roubini and Brad Setser (2004), ‘Legal Reform’
B Models of Bail-Ins and Bail-Outs and Catalytic Finance
18. Carlo Cottarelli and Curzio Giannini (2002), ‘Bedfellows,
Hostages, or Perfect Strangers? Global Capital Markets and the
Catalytic Effect of IMF Crisis Lending’
19. Andrew Haldane, Simon Hayes, Adrian Penalver, Victoria Saporta
and Hyun Song Shin (2002), ‘Binding-in the Private Sector’
PART III OTHER POLICY ISSUES
A Appropriate Exchange Rate Regime for Emerging Markets
20. Stanley Fischer (2001), ‘Exchange Rate Regimes: Is the Bipolar
View Correct?’
21. Guillermo A. Calvo and Carmen M. Reinhart (2002), ‘Fear of
Floating’
B Dollarization
22. Andrew Berg and Eduardo Borensztein (2000), ‘The Pros and Cons
of Full Dollarization’
C Capital Controls
23. Eswar Prasad, Kenneth Rogoff, Shang-Jin Wei and M. Ayhan Kose
(2003), ‘Effects of Financial Globalization on Developing
Countries: Some Empirical Evidence’
24. Jagdish Bhagwati (1998), ‘The Capital Myth: The Difference
Between Trade in Widgets and Dollars’
D An International Lender of Last Resort (ILOLR)
25. Stanley Fischer (1999), ‘On the Need for an International
Lender of Last Resort’
26. J. Sachs (1995), ‘Do We Need an International Lender of Last
Resort’
Name Index
Edited by Nouriel Roubini, Professor of Economics, Stern School of Business, New York University, US and Chairman, Roubini Global Economics, LLC and Marc Uzan, Founder and Executive Director, Reinventing Bretton Woods Committee, France
'An essential reference work for both scholars and practitioners
concerned with financial crises. Roubini and Uzan have collected
from around the world - from reports, conferences and professional
journals alike - the key theoretical and applied work on the crisis
problem. The result is hefty and therefore worth the price.'
*Barry Eichengreen, University of California, Berkeley, US*
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