Recent years have seen a return to the capital controls policy debate. Presenting new data, this column argues that liberalisation of capital-outflow controls can allow emerging-market economies to reduce net capital inflow pressures, but may cost emerging economies the fiscal revenues that external financial repression generates.
Why do emerging markets liberalise capital-outflow controls? Fiscal versus net capital flow concerns
Joshua Aizenman, Gurnain Kaur Pasricha, 02 May 2013
Related
-
Philipp Hartmann, Myron Kwast, Peter Praet
Most Read
-
Morikawa
-
Terzi
-
Goldstein, Levy Yeyati, Sartorio
-
Taneja, Mizen, Bloom
-
Aghion, Artus, Oliu-Barton, Pradelski
-
Eichengreen, O'Rourke
-
Burgess, Sievertsen
-
Mitze, Kosfeld, Rode, Wälde
-
Heldring, Robinson
-
Eichengreen
Blogs&Reviews
-
Hebous
-
Gylfason
-
Beetsma, Schuknecht
-
Bouwens
-
Gaspar, Larraín Bascuñán
Vox eBooks
Don't Miss
Arezki, Djankov, Panizza
Bartsch, Bénassy-Quéré, Corsetti, Debrun
Scheuer
Events
-
13 - 13 April 2021 / Online /
-
14 - 14 April 2021 / Online /
-
14 - 16 April 2021 / Online / The CEPR Network on Household Finance, EDHEC and Think Forward Initiative (TFI).
-
16 - 16 April 2021 / Online /
-
20 - 20 April 2021 / Webinar /
CEPR Policy Research
-
Gobillon, Solignac
-
Giglio, Maggiori, Stroebel, Weber
-
Summers, Fatás
-
Favero, Galasso
-
Butt, Churm, McMahon, Morotz, Schanz
-
Eichengreen, Avgouleas, Poiares Maduro, Panizza, Portes, Weder di Mauro, Wyplosz, Zettelmeyer
-
Baldwin, Beck, Bénassy-Quéré, Blanchard, Corsetti, De Grauwe, den Haan, Giavazzi, Gros, Kalemli-Ozcan, Micossi, Papaioannou, Pesenti, Pissarides , Tabellini, Weder di Mauro
-
Baldwin, Nakatomi
-
Thimann
-
Goodhart, Perotti