Finance
Key policy-makers and demonstrators alike are questioning elements of global finance and regulators are responding with attempts to reduce risks in global banking. Yet too few people are asking how global finance can better serve global growth and development; what would an ideal global banking and financial system look like? The project seeks to contribute to the public debate by bringing together central bankers, finance professionals, investment negotiators and world-class academics, and applying economic, political, historical, and legal perspectives.
Our research in global financial governance area focuses on three broad areas:
- What issues require global collective action? Where is international cooperation in finance necessary, and where is it not? What role, if any, should the IMF and other international institutions play in regulating finance? What role will new and emerging inter-governmental networks, such as the G20, play? What institutional reforms are necessary to ensure that global financial governance supports effective national regulation?
- How much ‘room for manoeuvre’ is there for developing countries? What international regulations, standards and rules are clashing with or foreclosing developing country policy choices? Which global rules and standards are countries under particularly high pressure to implement and what are the sources of these pressures? How can developing countries navigate overlapping regimes in finance, trade and investment to their advantage?
- How do we address ‘regulatory capture’? Who benefits under different scenarios for international financial regulation? Which actors must be mobilised and engaged to prevent regulatory capture – governments, regulators, private sector actors, and other non-state actors?
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Global Leaders Fellow Camila Duran Presents Paper at Conference on Monetary Stability in Latin America
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Global Leaders Fellow presents analysis of Brazil’s response to financial crisis to senior policymakers
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High-Level Report offers new vision for macroeconomic policy in Africa and regulatory responses to new global finance
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GEG WP 2017/126 Misalignment of exchange rates: What lessons for growth and policy mix in the WAEMU?
Working papers
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GEG WP 2016/121 “Countries Don’t Go Bankrupt”: Sovereign Debt Crises and Perceptions of Sovereignty in an Era of Globalisation
Working papers
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GEG WP 2016/120 The Tangibility of the Intangibles: What Drives Banks’ Sustainability Disclosure in the Emerging Economies?
Working papers
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Background Paper: Implementation of the Basel Framework: Considerations relating to LICs and LMICs
Other