2001
DOI: 10.3386/w8323
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Financial Systems, Economic Growth, and Globalization

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Cited by 98 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…In order to account for the activity and growth of government over the period, we include a measure of Central government spending, defined as central government expenditure as a share of GDP. Data are from Rousseau and Sylla (2003). Ideally we would have liked to include both central and local governments since the spending patterns at these two administrative levels may both vary systematically across countries and within countries over time.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In order to account for the activity and growth of government over the period, we include a measure of Central government spending, defined as central government expenditure as a share of GDP. Data are from Rousseau and Sylla (2003). Ideally we would have liked to include both central and local governments since the spending patterns at these two administrative levels may both vary systematically across countries and within countries over time.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our main measure of trade openness is a standard de facto measure: the sum of exports and imports as a share of GDP. For the pre-1960 period data come from Mitchell (1995Mitchell ( , 1998aMitchell ( , 1998b, Rousseau and Sylla (2003) and López-Córdoba and Meissner (2005) and for the post-1960 period we use data from IFS. Data are generally lacking for wartime years.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…2 Napoleon's sentence "l'intendence suivra'" could be paraphrased with "la finance suivra''' to characterize the ancillary notion that was traditionally attached to the provision of financial services across jurisdictions. This view reflected the gene ral perception that a successful commercial integration was the first and most relevant policy objective while financial 1 Rousseau and Sylla (2001) find that trade integration in the postwar period was not affected by financial integration; Lane and Milesi-Ferretti (2000) find that still in the 1990s financial openness benefited from the level of trade integration. 2 Countries that deliberately liberalized capital movements more than or before trade are concentrated in Latin America.…”
Section: Financial Integration: How and Whenmentioning
confidence: 99%