Post Crisis Lessons for Open Economies: Are They All New?


Autoria(s): Magas, István
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

This paper will argue that the American economy could and will absorb the recent shocks, and that in the longer run (within a matter of years), it will somehow convert the revealed weaknesses to its advantage. America has a long record of learning from its excesses to improve the working of its particular brand of capitalism, dating back to the imposition of antitrust controls on the robber barons in the late 1800s and the enhancement of investor protection after the 1929 crash. The American economy has experienced market imperfections of all kinds but it almost always has found, true, not perfect, but fairly reliable regulatory answers and has managed to adapt to change, (e. g. Dodd-Frank Act on financial stability). The U.S. has many times pioneered in the elaboration of both theoretical and policy oriented solutions for conflicts between markets and government to increase economic welfare (Bernanke, 2008, p. 425). There is no single reason why it should not turn the latest financial calamities to its advantage. At the same time, to regain confidence in capitalism as a global system, global efforts are indispensable. To identify some of the global economic conflicts that have a lot to do with U.S. markets in particular, we seek answers to global systemic questions.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://unipub.lib.uni-corvinus.hu/1543/1/Ch_EU_IstvanMagas_p15.pdf

Magas, István (2012) Post Crisis Lessons for Open Economies: Are They All New? In: China - EU Cooperation for a Sustainable Economy. Corvinus University of Budapest, Budapest, pp. 15-55. ISBN 978-963-503-497-0

Publicador

Corvinus University of Budapest

Relação

http://unipub.lib.uni-corvinus.hu/1543/

Palavras-Chave #Economic policy #International economics
Tipo

Book Section

PeerReviewed