Capital control
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Capital control is the monetary policy device that a country's government (i.e. sovereign power) uses to regulate the flow of investment-oriented money into and out of a country or currency. The decade since the Asian Currency Crisis in 1997-1998 has rekindled debate over the wisdom of developing markets having capital controls. Originally, as the march of globalization began to really get underway with the formalization of the World Trade Organization and the Uruguay Round of General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), it was thought and in fact urged by the International Monetary Fund and others, that developing countries needed to liberalize their capital controlled environments and embrace the free flow of capital coursing throughout the global economy.
As it became clear that countries doing this, including Malaysia, Thailand and Mexico, essentially ceded control of their economies to external forces, namely international capital movements, hot money and capital flight; and countries that did not, like China and India, retained control and were not nearly as vulnerable to the volatility of international capital movement, some argued that capital controls are advisable for smaller economies to use, and to transition away from them only over long, general evolutionary timelines. Malaysia is but one example of a country that switched regimes, from open in the late 1990s, to closed following China's model, realizing that its financial institutions and general corporate environment was not yet ready for unadulterated exposure to the blistering competition coming from the powerful economies like the United States, United Kingdom and Japan. Notably the economists supporting capital controls in certain cases were not only the "usual suspects" from the left but also liberal economists like Jagdish Bhagwati [1] and newpapers like the Economist[2].
[edit] Free movement of capital and payments
[edit] External links
- Christopher J. Neely, An introduction to capital controls (PDF), Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, November/December 1999, pp. 13-30
- James Oliver, What are Capital Controls?, University of Iowa Center for International Finance & Development
- Ethan Kaplan, Dani Rodrik (2001) Did the Malaysian capital controls work? NBER Working Paper No. 8142
[edit] References
- ^ Jagdish Bhagwati (2004) In defense of Globalization. Oxford University Press; pp.199-207
- ^ The Economist (2003) A place for capital controls

