2003
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.393620
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Capital Management Techniques in Developing Countries: An Assessment of Experiences from the 1990's and Lessons for the Future

Abstract: This paper uses the term, capital management techniques, to refer to two complementary (and often overlapping) types of financial policies: policies that govern international private capital flows and those that enforce prudential management of domestic financial institutions. The paper shows that regimes of capital management take diverse forms and are multi-faceted. The paper also shows that capital management techniques can be static or dynamic. Static management techniques are those that authorities do not… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(43 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…It's worth to recalling that during the 1990s, up to the emerging countries crises, when the exchange rate managed regimes (fixed or exchange bands) prevailed, some of these countries adopted the same two kind of regulatory instruments, which integrated what Epstein, Grabel and Jomo (2004) called "Capital management techniques". These techniques include the traditional menu of capital controls but add a set of prudential financial regulations (as restrictions on banks operations in foreign currencies).…”
Section: The Post-crisis Policy Dilemmasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It's worth to recalling that during the 1990s, up to the emerging countries crises, when the exchange rate managed regimes (fixed or exchange bands) prevailed, some of these countries adopted the same two kind of regulatory instruments, which integrated what Epstein, Grabel and Jomo (2004) called "Capital management techniques". These techniques include the traditional menu of capital controls but add a set of prudential financial regulations (as restrictions on banks operations in foreign currencies).…”
Section: The Post-crisis Policy Dilemmasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another option is implementing capital controls, which have proven be effective in several economies (see for example Epstein, Grabel, and Jomo, 2004). However, with the advent of greater financial integration, capital controls, particularly on inflows, have to be endorsed at the international level to be effective (Grenville, 2007).…”
Section: Policy Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From our perspective, the real crux of the problem turns out to be one leg of this 'tri-lemma", namely the fact that orthodox economists, by and large, have taken for granted that eliminating capital controls is the best policy, and that virtually complete financial liberalization with respect to the foreign sector is the optimal policy. Yet recent evidence amply shows that open capital markets can create very costly problems for developing countries and that many successful developing countries have used a variety of capital management techniques to manage these flows in order, among other things, to help them escape this so-called "trilemma" (Ocampo, 2004;Epstein, Grabel and Jomo, K.S., 2005).…”
Section: Socially Responsible Alternatives To Inflation Targetingmentioning
confidence: 99%