Emerging Markets and Financial Volatility-Beyond Mexico
In the wake of the Mexican financial crisis, too much attention has been given to what was happening in emerging economies and too little to what was changing in financial markets. What are these changes? First, much of the capital flow to emergin...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Viewpoint |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1996/02/696765/emerging-markets-financial-volatility-beyond-mexico http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11636 |
Summary: | In the wake of the Mexican financial
crisis, too much attention has been given to what was
happening in emerging economies and too little to what was
changing in financial markets. What are these changes?
First, much of the capital flow to emerging markets is now
in the form of bonds and portfolio equity investment.
Second, investors managing these flows are attracted to
high-risk, high-return opportunities and are less patient
than the foreign direct investors or banks that emerging
market governments may have been more used to dealing with.
Third, these investors have no way of communicating their
patience level to policymakers other than by exiting. And
fourth, high information costs tend to concentrate these
flows in "hot" countries and lead investors to
rely on a few knowledgeable observers to signal when their
returns are at risk, adding to the potential volatility.
This Note attempts to explain the origins of volatility, how
volatility affects emerging market investors, and the
economic management implications behind the changes. In the
wake of volatile global capital flows, the World Bank too
must reconsider its role in its assistance to client countries. |
---|