From Asian to Global Financial Crisis: An Asian Regulator's View of Unfettered Finance in the 1990s and 2000s Reviews


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From Asian to Global Financial Crisis: An Asian Regulator's View of Unfettered Finance in the 1990s and 2000s

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This is a unique insider account of the new world of unfettered finance. The author, an Asian regulator, examines how old mindsets, market fundamentalism, loose monetary policy, carry trade, lax supervision, greed, cronyism, and financial engineering caused both the Asian crisis of the late 1990s and the current global crisis of 2008-2009. This book shows how the Japanese zero interest rate policy to fight deflation helped create the carry trade that generated bubbles in Asia whose effects brought Asian economies down. The study's main purpose is to demonstrate that global finance is so interlinked and interactive that our current tools and institutional structure to deal with critical episodes are completely outdated. The book explains how current financial policies and regulation failed to deal with a global bubble and makes recommendations on what must change.




    From Asian to Global Financial Crisis: An Asian Regulator's View of Unfettered Finance in the 1990s and 2000s Reviews


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    5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars A first hand captivating account 'has been there done that, October 1, 2009
    As a principal in the Asian Crisis, Andrew Sheng had 10 years to reflect on what transpired during that crisis, and was able to look at the current crisis through this prism. Sheng's book links the Asian Crisis and the current crisis in a way that only someone who 'has been there done that' can do. I contributed to extinguishing the fires in Korea after the crisis on behalf of the World Bank, and though that I knew quite a bit. Nevertheless, I learned an awful lot from reading Andrew Sheng's book both factually, as well as his brilliant analytical frameworks to address issues. Sheng reminds us that there has been much talk about financial stability since the Asian Crisis but no concrete actions. Financial policy makers should have been taking numerous actions as a precaution after the Asian crisis but didn't, and as we all know, we are where we are-- in a terrible morass. We keep burying our heads in the sand and no one has yet admitted that they did not do what they were supposed... Read more
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