Liquidity vs. Efficiency in Liberalized International Financial Markets: a Warning to Developing Economies

Vol. 20 No. 3 (2000)

Jul-Sep / 2000
Published July 1, 2000
PDF-English
PDF-English

How to Cite

Davidson, Paul. 2000. “Liquidity Vs. Efficiency in Liberalized International Financial Markets: A Warning to Developing Economies”. Brazilian Journal of Political Economy 20 (3):191-211. https://doi.org/10.1590/0101-31572000-1238.

Liquidity vs. Efficiency in Liberalized International Financial Markets: a Warning to Developing Economies

Paul Davidson
Holly Chair of Excellence in Political Economy, University of Tennessee, United States.
Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 20 No. 3 (2000), Jul-Sep / 2000, Pages 191-211

Abstract

Until 1973 the postwar international payments system was, in large measure,
shaped by Keynes’s thesis that flexible exchange rates and free international capital mobility
are incompatible with global full employment and rapid economic growth in an era of multilateral
free trade (Felix, 1977-8). This resulted in a stable international monetary system
that permitted the global economy to experience unparalleled economic growth and prosperity
despite widespread capital controls and international financial market regulations.
Since 1973, the financial system has grown progressively more fragile with recurrent and
increasingly stressful international debt and currency liquidity crises threatening the stability
of the global economy.

JEL Classification: E12.


Keywords: Exchange rate regime Market efficiency uncertainty