男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

The silent revolution inside IMF

By Stephan Richter (China Daily) Updated: 2013-01-04 08:13

The International Monetary Fund, at long last, has begun to open up. Gone are the days when it acted as a handmaiden of Western, mainly US, economic orthodoxy. It is even throwing a gauntlet down to the mighty US Federal Reserve, questioning the effects its constant monetary boosting has had on the rest of the world.

Given that the IMF is the key arbiter on many key issues of global finance and economics, and hence also over global fairness and equity, the change should be greatly welcomed. Over the past decade, the reform debate had centered mainly on giving emerging market economies more voting power, by commensurably reducing the voting shares of the "rich" world.

Given the global economic dynamics, the adjustment was of course long overdue. One clear indication is that the IMF's senior-level staff members have become much less American and less European. But now, the first substantive consequence of these shifts are beginning to emerge.

The frontline of this fight is the IMF's Research Department, where old school guys (yes, mostly guys) and rich country governments battle the new thinkers. Take, for example, the third quantitative easing (QE3) the Fed announced in late 2012. From the American perspective, the big boost in money supply is intended to stimulate economic growth - and therefore job creation - at home.

The extent to which these measures actually achieve that goal continues to be the subject of much controversy even in the US. What is not controversial is that these measures can have a negative impact on emerging market economies. And policymakers there will generally agree that it is important to have a growth-oriented US economy.

But there is growing concern as to whether US authorities are not increasingly poking in the dark with their policy measures. QE3 has mainly boosted the stock market, not the real economy - and even the stock market effect is wearing off.

Either way, emerging market economies are no longer willing to acquiesce. Brazil has stepped forward to lead the defense. That has upset many US policymakers. Perhaps not surprisingly, that has also generated a lot of negative press about Brazil in the US media.

Enter the now more open-minded IMF, as Boston University professor Kevin P. Gallagher has documented, it has issued a whole range of reports that cast a critical eye on the spillover effects that quantitative easing in the US has had on emerging market economies.

The IMF found, for example, that lower interest rates in the US were associated with a higher probability of a drastic increase in capital flow into emerging market economies. And it declared that such increase in capital flows can cause currency appreciation and asset bubbles, which in turn can make exports more expensive and destabilize the emerging market economies' domestic financial systems.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

Most Viewed Today's Top News
The unique loanwords in our daily life By zoe_ting

In our daily life, more and more loanwords appear and change our habits in Chinese expression. Loanwords sound very similar with their original English words, and the process of learning them is full of fun to foreign students.

Going "home" for the first time in four years By SharkMinnow

It has been a while since I've contributed to this Forum and I figured that since now I am officially on summer holiday and another school year is behind me I would share a post with you.

...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 岳普湖县| 镇远县| 竹山县| 洪雅县| 盐亭县| 富顺县| 闽侯县| 新野县| 抚宁县| 奉贤区| 松滋市| 木里| 孟村| 虹口区| 崇文区| 瓦房店市| 汤阴县| 永泰县| 宜川县| 湛江市| 曲阳县| 米林县| 恩施市| 广宗县| 祁门县| 武鸣县| 天门市| 淳化县| 普安县| 射洪县| 潜山县| 竹溪县| 米脂县| 固始县| 大名县| 鲁甸县| 聊城市| 赞皇县| 永嘉县| 定南县| 都兰县| 定远县| 尼勒克县| 绵阳市| 平乐县| 萨嘎县| 恩施市| 安西县| 修武县| 蓝山县| 榆社县| 麻江县| 阿城市| 安化县| 军事| 剑河县| 晋城| 华容县| 泰来县| 威远县| 邵阳市| 双流县| 丹凤县| 疏勒县| 丹凤县| 海阳市| 贺兰县| 福贡县| 鄱阳县| 郧西县| 武安市| 威海市| 内丘县| 睢宁县| 黄平县| 藁城市| 武强县| 吉林省| 揭东县| 绵竹市| 台北市| 扬州市|