Description
The author examines the theory and practice of government interventions in the financial sector of two newly industrializing countries, Brazil and South Korea. Findings from this study help to explain the widespread use of such interventions despite the generally negative predictions (of inefficiencies and general failure) which derive from more prominent and traditional theories. This work contributes a political-economic exploration of how, when, and what kinds of financial regulations can be successful. Historical and institutional analysis of the use of capital controls, credit controls, and economic planning in Brazil and the Republic of Korea illuminate the ways in which strategic use of specific financial controls facilitate these countries's efforts to industrialize rapidly, and solve the problems of capital creation, productivity, preservation, and disciplined management.
A political-economic investigation of the use of capital controls and successful industrial policy in two newly industrializing countries-one Asian, one Latin American.
About the Author
Jessica Gordon Nembhard is an economic development analyst with the Black Community Crusade for Children at the Children's Defense Fund. She received her PhD in Economics from the University of Massachusetts.
Book Information
ISBN 9780275951269
Author Jessica Nembhard
Format Hardback
Page Count 296
Imprint Praeger Publishers Inc
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc