Asset Price Instability and Policy Responses: The Legacy of Liberalization


Autoria(s): Bell, Stephen; Quiggin, John
Contribuinte(s)

Glen Atkinson

Data(s)

01/09/2006

Resumo

The problem of asset price bubbles, and more generally of instability in the financial system, has been a matter of concern since the 1980s but has only recently moved to the center of the macroeconomic policy debate. The main concern with bubbles arises when they burst, imposing losses on investors holding the bubble assets and potentially on the financial institutions that have extended credit to them. Asset price volatility is an inevitable consequence of financial market liberalization and, in extreme cases, generates asset price bubbles, the bursting of which can impose substantial economic and social costs. Policy responses within the existing liberalized financial system face daunting levels of uncertainty and risk. Given the pattern of increasing asset market volatility over recent decades and the policy issues highlighted in this paper, the future looks uncertain. Another significant cycle of asset price movements, especially in one of the major economies, could see a fundamental revision of thinking about the costs and benefits of liberalized financial systems.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76551

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

M. E.Sharpe for Association for Evolutionary Economics

Palavras-Chave #Economics #Hypothesis #Markets #Rules #Studies #Trade liberalization #Price stabilization #Macroeconomics #Efficient markets #C1 #360100 Political Science #750699 Government and politics not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article