Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1 NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS AND GLOBAL CAPITAL: A RECASTING
- 2 FINANCIAL MARKET INFLUENCE ON GOVERNMENT POLICY: THEORY AND HYPOTHESES
- 3 FINANCIAL MARKET INFLUENCE IN DEVELOPED NATIONS: AN EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT
- 4 FINANCIAL MARKET–GOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN EMERGING MARKETS
- 5 POLITICS MEETS MARKETS: DOMESTIC RESPONSES TO FINANCIAL MARKET PRESSURES
- 6 ALTERNATIVE DOMESTIC RESPONSES: CHANGES TO FINANCIAL MARKET–GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
- 7 HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF? FINANCIAL MARKETS AND NATIONAL GOVERNMENT POLICIES BEFORE THE FIRST WORLD WAR
- 8 FINANCIAL MARKET–GOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
- APPENDIX 2.1 FINANCIAL MARKET INTERVIEWS
- APPENDIX 3.1 DATA DEFINITIONS AND SOURCES
- APPENDIX 3.2 FULL RESULTS FOR MACROINDICATORS MODEL
- APPENDIX 4.1 THE COMPONENTS OF THE SDDS
- APPENDIX 4.2 RATING AGENCY METHODOLOGIES
- APPENDIX 4.3 RATING AGENCY OUTCOMES, 1997
- APPENDIX 6.1 NATIONS IN CAPITAL CONTROLS DATA SET
- References
- Index
- Titles in the series
6 - ALTERNATIVE DOMESTIC RESPONSES: CHANGES TO FINANCIAL MARKET–GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1 NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS AND GLOBAL CAPITAL: A RECASTING
- 2 FINANCIAL MARKET INFLUENCE ON GOVERNMENT POLICY: THEORY AND HYPOTHESES
- 3 FINANCIAL MARKET INFLUENCE IN DEVELOPED NATIONS: AN EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT
- 4 FINANCIAL MARKET–GOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN EMERGING MARKETS
- 5 POLITICS MEETS MARKETS: DOMESTIC RESPONSES TO FINANCIAL MARKET PRESSURES
- 6 ALTERNATIVE DOMESTIC RESPONSES: CHANGES TO FINANCIAL MARKET–GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
- 7 HISTORY REPEATING ITSELF? FINANCIAL MARKETS AND NATIONAL GOVERNMENT POLICIES BEFORE THE FIRST WORLD WAR
- 8 FINANCIAL MARKET–GOVERNMENT RELATIONS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
- APPENDIX 2.1 FINANCIAL MARKET INTERVIEWS
- APPENDIX 3.1 DATA DEFINITIONS AND SOURCES
- APPENDIX 3.2 FULL RESULTS FOR MACROINDICATORS MODEL
- APPENDIX 4.1 THE COMPONENTS OF THE SDDS
- APPENDIX 4.2 RATING AGENCY METHODOLOGIES
- APPENDIX 4.3 RATING AGENCY OUTCOMES, 1997
- APPENDIX 6.1 NATIONS IN CAPITAL CONTROLS DATA SET
- References
- Index
- Titles in the series
Summary
Soros and those like him have opportunities because the government allows them those opportunities.
How do governments' institutional choices affect the operation of financial market pressures? In the previous chapter, I consider some of the means by which domestic political institutions affect government responses to financial market pressures. In this chapter, I consider another facet of the impact of national institutions on financial market–government interactions. I evaluate various institutional means by which governments can alter their relationship with global capital markets. Particularly in the advanced capitalist democracies, governments have choices regarding the extent to and ways in which they interact with global capital markets. Nations are differently integrated into the global capital market; the choices governments make regarding integration are at least partly exogenous to economic globalization, as well as to purely economic considerations. They reflect instead domestic political contests. In other words, I suggest that, in many cases, governments can and do respond to international market pressures by changing some institutions, rather than by changing economic policies.
I evaluate three types of policies: policies that alter market participants' expectations regarding macroeconomic outcomes, policies that insulate particular groups of investors from certain kinds of investment risks, and policies that insulate governments from activity in international financial markets. In general, I argue that, particularly in advanced capitalist democracies, governments have some significant degree of choice regarding these policies: they are not forced by financial market pressures to make particular institutional changes.
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- Global Capital and National Governments , pp. 199 - 248Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003