The Per Jacobsson Lecture [electronic resource] : Asian Monetary integration: Will It Ever Happen?.
Material type: TextSeries: Other PeriodicalsPublication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2006Description: 1 online resource (39 p.)ISBN: 1451980744 :ISSN: 0252-3108Subject(s): Inflation | Monetary Integration | Monetary Policy | Monetary Union | Trade Integration | China, People's Republic of | Japan | SingaporeAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: The Per Jacobsson Lecture : Asian Monetary integration: Will It Ever Happen?Online resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: This paper discusses the need for Asian Monetary Integration. The original motivation for proposals for Asian monetary Integration had to do with a desire to reduce Asia's susceptibility to shocks, particularly financial shocks. There was also a broader sense that Asia had to be more self-reliant and gain fuller control over its destiny. The objectives are about growth, about greater trade integration, about spurring greater cross-border flows of investment within Asia, and about promoting the integration and deepening of financial markets. This paper highlights that financial market integration has lagged substantially behind trade integration, and this is why Asian saving surpluses are intermediated largely through financial markets outside Asia.This paper discusses the need for Asian Monetary Integration. The original motivation for proposals for Asian monetary Integration had to do with a desire to reduce Asia's susceptibility to shocks, particularly financial shocks. There was also a broader sense that Asia had to be more self-reliant and gain fuller control over its destiny. The objectives are about growth, about greater trade integration, about spurring greater cross-border flows of investment within Asia, and about promoting the integration and deepening of financial markets. This paper highlights that financial market integration has lagged substantially behind trade integration, and this is why Asian saving surpluses are intermediated largely through financial markets outside Asia.
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