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Capital control

Capital controls are residency-based measures such as transaction taxes, other limits, or outright prohibitions that a nation's government can use to regulate flows from capital markets into and out of the country's capital account. These measures may be economy-wide, sector-specific (usually the financial sector), or industry specific (e.g. "strategic" industries). They may apply to all flows, or may differentiate by type or duration of the flow (debt, equity, or direct investment, and short-term vs. medium- and long-term).

Types of capital control include exchange controls that prevent or limit the buying and selling of a national currency at the market rate, caps on the allowed volume for the international sale or purchase of various financial assets, transaction taxes such as the proposed Tobin tax on currency exchanges, minimum stay requirements, requirements for mandatory approval, or even limits on the amount of money a private citizen is allowed to remove from the country. There have been several shifts of opinion on whether capital controls are beneficial and in what circumstances they should be used. Capital controls were an integral part of the Bretton Woods system which emerged after World War II and lasted until the early 1970s. This period was the first time capital controls had been endorsed by mainstream economics. Capital controls were relatively easy to impose, in part because international capital markets were less active in general.[1] In the 1970s, economic liberal, free-market economists became increasingly successful in persuading their colleagues that capital controls were in the main harmful. The US, other Western governments, and multilateral financial institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank began to take a critical view of capital controls and persuaded many countries to abandon them to facilitate financial globalization.[2]

The Latin American debt crisis of the early 1980s, the East Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s, the Russian ruble crisis of 1998–1999, and the global financial crisis of 2008 highlighted the risks associated with the volatility of capital flows, and led many countries, even those with relatively open capital accounts, to make use of capital controls alongside macroeconomic and prudential policies as means to dampen the effects of volatile flows on their economies. In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, as capital inflows surged to emerging market economies, a group of economists at the IMF outlined the elements of a policy toolkit to manage the macroeconomic and financial-stability risks associated with capital flow volatility. The proposed toolkit allowed a role for capital controls.[3][4] The study, as well as a successor study focusing on financial-stability concerns stemming from capital flow volatility,[5] while not representing an IMF official view, were nevertheless influential in generating debate among policy makers and the international community, and ultimately in bringing about a shift in the institutional position of the IMF.[6][7][8] With the increased use of capital controls in recent years, the IMF has moved to destigmatize the use of capital controls alongside macroeconomic and prudential policies to deal with capital flow volatility.[9] More widespread use of capital controls raises a host of multilateral coordination issues, as enunciated for example by the G-20, echoing the concerns voiced by John Maynard Keynes and Harry Dexter White more than six decades ago.[10]

History Edit

Pre-World War I Edit

Prior to the 19th century, there was generally little need for capital controls due to low levels of international trade and financial integration. In the First Age of Globalization, which is generally dated from 1870 to 1914, capital controls remained largely absent.[11][12]

World War I to World War II: 1914–1945 Edit

Highly restrictive capital controls were introduced with the outbreak of World War I. In the 1920s they were generally relaxed, only to be strengthened again in the wake of the 1929 Great Crash. This was more an ad hoc response to potentially damaging flows rather than based on a change in normative economic theory. Economic historian Barry Eichengreen has implied that the use of capital controls peaked during World War II, but the more general view is that the most wide-ranging implementation occurred after Bretton Woods.[11][13][14][15] An example of capital control in the interwar period was the Reich Flight Tax, introduced in 1931 by German Chancellor Heinrich Brüning. The tax was needed to limit the removal of capital from the country by wealthy residents. At the time, Germany was suffering economic hardship due to the Great Depression and the harsh war reparations imposed after World War I. Following the ascension of the Nazis to power in 1933, the tax was repurposed to confiscate money and property from Jews fleeing the state-sponsored antisemitism.[16][17][18]

Bretton Woods era: 1945–1971 Edit

 
A widespread system of capital controls were decided upon at the international 1944 conference at Bretton Woods.

At the end of World War II, international capital was caged by the imposition of strong and wide-ranging capital controls as part of the newly created Bretton Woods system—it was perceived that this would help protect the interests of ordinary people and the wider economy. These measures were popular as at this time the western public's view of international bankers was generally very low, blaming them for the Great Depression.[19][20] John Maynard Keynes, one of the principal architects of the Bretton Woods system, envisaged capital controls as a permanent feature of the international monetary system,[21] though he had agreed current account convertibility should be adopted once international conditions had stabilised sufficiently. This essentially meant that currencies were to be freely convertible for the purposes of international trade in goods and services but not for capital account transactions. Most industrial economies relaxed their controls around 1958 to allow this to happen.[22] The other leading architect of Bretton Woods, the American Harry Dexter White, and his boss Henry Morgenthau, were somewhat less radical than Keynes but still agreed on the need for permanent capital controls. In his closing address to the Bretton Woods conference, Morgenthau spoke of how the measures adopted would drive "the usurious money lenders from the temple of international finance".[19]

Following the Keynesian Revolution, the first two decades after World War II saw little argument against capital controls from economists, though an exception was Milton Friedman. From the late 1950s, the effectiveness of capital controls began to break down, in part due to innovations such as the Eurodollar market. According to Dani Rodrik, it is unclear to what extent this was due to an unwillingness on the part of governments to respond effectively, as compared with an inability to do so.[21] Eric Helleiner posits that heavy lobbying from Wall Street bankers was a factor in persuading American authorities not to subject the Eurodollar market to capital controls. From the late 1960s the prevailing opinion among economists began to switch to the view that capital controls are on the whole more harmful than beneficial.[23][24]

While many of the capital controls in this era were directed at international financiers and banks, some were directed at individual citizens. In the 1960s, British individuals were at one point restricted from taking more than £50 with them out of the country for their foreign holidays.[25] In their book This Time Is Different (2009), economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff suggest that the use of capital controls in this period, even more than its rapid economic growth, was responsible for the very low level of banking crises that occurred in the Bretton Woods era.[26] According to Barry Eichengreen, capital controls were more effective in the 1940s and 1950s than they were subsequently.[27]

Post-Bretton Woods era: 1971–2009 Edit

By the late 1970s, as part of the displacement of Keynesianism in favour of free-market orientated policies and theories, and the shift from the social-liberal paradigm to neoliberalism countries began abolishing their capital controls, starting between 1973 and 1974 with the US, Canada, Germany, and Switzerland, and followed by the United Kingdom in 1979.[28] Most other advanced and emerging economies followed, chiefly in the 1980s and early 1990s.[11] During the period spanning from approximately 1980–2009, the normative opinion was that capital controls were to be avoided except perhaps in a crisis. It was widely held that the absence of controls allowed capital to freely flow to where it is needed most, helping not only investors to enjoy good returns, but also helping ordinary people to benefit from economic growth.[29] During the 1980s, many emerging economies decided or were coerced into following the advanced economies by abandoning their capital controls, though over 50 retained them at least partially.[11][30]

The orthodox view that capital controls are a bad thing was challenged following the 1997 Asian financial crisis. Asian nations that had retained their capital controls such as India and China could credit them for allowing them to escape the crisis relatively unscathed.[26][31] Malaysia's prime minister Mahathir bin Mohamad imposed capital controls as an emergency measure in September 1998, both strict exchange controls and limits on outflows from portfolio investments; these were found to be effective in containing the damage from the crisis.[11][32][33] In the early 1990s, even some pro-globalization economists like Jagdish Bhagwati,[34] and some writers in publications like The Economist,[32][35] spoke out in favor of a limited role for capital controls. While many developing world economies lost faith in the free market consensus, it remained strong among Western nations.[11]

After the global financial crisis: 2009–2012 Edit

By 2009, the global financial crisis had caused a resurgence in Keynesian thought which reversed the previously prevailing orthodoxy.[36] During the 2008–2011 Icelandic financial crisis, the IMF proposed that capital controls on outflows should be imposed by Iceland, calling them "an essential feature of the monetary policy framework, given the scale of potential capital outflows".[37]

In the latter half of 2009, as the global economy started to recover from the global financial crisis, capital inflows to emerging market economies, especially, in Asia and Latin America, surged, raising macroeconomic and financial-stability risks. Several emerging market economies responded to these concerns by adopting capital controls or macroprudential measures; Brazil imposed a tax on the purchase of financial assets by foreigners and Taiwan restricted overseas investors from buying time deposits.[38] The partial return to favor of capital controls is linked to a wider emerging consensus among policy makers for the greater use of macroprudential policy. According to economics journalist Paul Mason, international agreement for the global adoption of Macro prudential policy was reached at the 2009 G20 Pittsburgh summit, an agreement which Mason said had seemed impossible at the London summit which took place only a few months before.[39]

Pro-capital control statements by various prominent economists, together with an influential staff position note prepared by IMF economists in February 2010 (Jonathan D. Ostry et al., 2010), and a follow-up note prepared in April 2011,[5] have been hailed as an "end of an era" that eventually led to a change in the IMF's long held position that capital controls should be used only in extremis, as a last resort, and on a temporary basis.[3][6][7][8][40][41][42][43] In June 2010, the Financial Times published several articles on the growing trend towards using capital controls. They noted influential voices from the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank had joined the IMF in advising there is a role for capital controls. The FT reported on the recent tightening of controls in Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan, Brazil, and Russia. In Indonesia, recently implemented controls include a one-month minimum holding period for certain securities. In South Korea, limits have been placed on currency forward positions. In Taiwan, the access that foreigner investors have to certain bank deposits has been restricted. The FT cautioned that imposing controls has a downside including the creation of possible future problems in attracting funds.[44][45][46]

By September 2010, emerging economies had experienced huge capital inflows resulting from carry trades made attractive to market participants by the expansionary monetary policies several large economies had undertaken over the previous two years as a response to the crisis.[clarification needed] This has led to countries such as Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Colombia, South Korea, Taiwan, South Africa, Russia, and Poland further reviewing the possibility of increasing their capital controls as a response.[47][48] In October 2010, with reference to increased concern about capital flows and widespread talk of an imminent currency war, financier George Soros has suggested that capital controls are going to become much more widely used over the next few years.[49][50] Several analysts have questioned whether controls will be effective for most countries, with Chile's finance minister saying his country had no plans to use them.[51][52][53]

In February 2011, citing evidence from new IMF research (Jonathan D. Ostry et al., 2010) that restricting short-term capital inflows could lower financial-stability risks,[3] over 250 economists headed by Joseph Stiglitz wrote a letter to the Obama administration asking them to remove clauses from various bilateral trade agreements that allow the use of capital controls to be penalized.[54] There was strong counter lobbying by business and so far the US administration has not acted on the call, although some figures such as Treasury secretary Tim Geithner have spoken out in support of capital controls at least in certain circumstances.[24][55]

Econometric analyses undertaken by the IMF,[56] and other academic economists found that in general countries which deployed capital controls weathered the 2008 crisis better than comparable countries which did not.[3][5][24] In April 2011, the IMF published its first ever set of guidelines for the use of capital controls.[57][58] At the 2011 G-20 Cannes summit, the G20 agreed that developing countries should have even greater freedom to use capital controls than the IMF guidelines allow.[59] A few weeks later, the Bank of England published a paper where they broadly welcomed the G20's decision in favor of even greater use of capital controls, though they caution that compared to developing countries, advanced economies may find it harder to implement efficient controls.[60] Not all momentum has been in favor of increased use of capital controls however. In December 2011, China partially loosened its controls on inbound capital flows, which the Financial Times described as reflecting an ongoing desire by Chinese authorities for further liberalization.[61] India also lifted some of its controls on inbound capital in early January 2012, drawing criticism from economist Arvind Subramanian, who considers relaxing capital controls a good policy for China but not for India considering her different economic circumstances.[62]

In September 2012, Michael W. Klein of Tufts University challenged the emergent consensus that short-term capital controls can be beneficial, publishing a preliminary study that found the measures used by countries like Brazil had been ineffective (at least up to 2010). Klein argues it was only countries with long term capital controls, such as China and India, that have enjoyed measurable protection from adverse capital flows.[63] In the same month, Ila Patnaik and Ajay Shah of the NIPFP published an article about the permanent and comprehensive capital controls in India, which seem to have been ineffective in achieving the goals of macroeconomic policy.[64] Other studies have found that capital controls may lower financial stability risks,[5][56] while the controls Brazilian authorities adopted after the 2008 financial crisis did have some beneficial effect on Brazil itself.[65]

Capital controls may have externalities. Some empirical studies find that capital flows were diverted to other countries as capital controls were tightened in Brazil.[66][67] An IMF staff discussion note (Jonathan D. Ostry et al., 2012) explores the multilateral consequences of capital controls, and the desirability of international cooperation to achieve globally efficient outcomes. It flags three issues of potential concern. First is the possibility that capital controls may be used as a substitute for warranted external adjustment, such as when inflow controls are used to sustain an undervalued currency. Second, the imposition of capital controls by one country may deflect some capital towards other recipient countries, exacerbating their inflow problem. Third, policies in source countries (including monetary policy) may exacerbate problems faced by capital-receiving countries if they increase the volume or riskiness of capital flows. The paper posits that if capital controls are justified from a national standpoint (in terms of reducing domestic distortions), then under a range of circumstances they should be pursued even if they give rise to cross-border spillovers. If policies in one country exacerbate existing distortions in other countries, and it is costly for other countries to respond, then multilateral coordination of unilateral policies is likely to be beneficial. Coordination may require borrowers to reduce inflow controls or an agreement with lenders to partially internalize the risks from excessively large or risky outflows.[10]

In December 2012, the IMF published a staff paper which further expanded on their recent support for the limited use of capital controls.[43]

Impossible trinity trilemma Edit

The history of capital controls is sometimes discussed in relation to the impossible trinity (trilemma, the unholy trinity), the finding that its impossible for a nation's economic policy to simultaneously deliver more than two of the following three desirable macroeconomic goals, namely a fixed exchange rate, an independent monetary policy, and free movement for capital (absence of capital controls).[15] In the First Age of Globalization, governments largely chose to pursue a stable exchange rate while allowing freedom of movement for capital. The sacrifice was that their monetary policy was largely dictated by international conditions, not by the needs of the domestic economy. In the Bretton Woods period, governments were free to have both generally stable exchange rates and independent monetary policies at the price of capital controls. The impossible trinity concept was especially influential during this era as a justification for capital controls. In the Washington Consensus period, advanced economies generally chose to allow freedom of capital and to continue maintaining an independent monetary policy while accepting a floating or semi-floating exchange rate.[11][24]

Examples since 2013 Edit

Capital controls in the European Single Market and EFTA Edit

The free flow of capital is one of the Four Freedoms of the European Single Market. Despite the progress that has been made, Europe's capital markets remain fragmented along national lines and European economies remain heavily reliant on the banking sector for their funding needs.[68] Within the building on the Investment Plan for Europe for a closer integration of capital markets, the European Commission adopted in 2015 the Action Plan on Building a Capital Markets Union (CMU) setting out a list of key measures to achieve a true single market for capital in Europe, which deepens the existing Banking Union, because this revolves around disintermediated, market-based forms of financing, which should represent an alternative to the traditionally predominant in Europe bank-based financing channel.[69] The project is a political signal to strengthen the European Single Market as a project of European Union (EU)'s 28 member states instead of just the Eurozone countries, and sent a strong signal to the UK to remain an active part of the EU, before Brexit.[70]

There have been three instances of capital controls in the EU and European Free Trade Association (EFTA) since 2008, all of them triggered by banking crises.

Iceland (2008–2017) Edit

In its 2008 financial crisis, Iceland (a member of the EFTA but not of the EU) imposed capital controls due to the collapse of its banking system. Iceland's government said in June 2015 that it planned to lift them; however, since the announced plans included a tax on taking capital out of the country, arguably they still constituted capital controls. The Icelandic government announced that capital controls had been lifted on 12 March 2017.[71] In 2017, University of California, Berkeley, economist Jon Steinsson said that he had opposed the introduction of capital controls in Iceland during the crisis but that the experience in Iceland had made him change his mind, commenting: "The government needed to finance very large deficits. The imposition of capital controls locked a considerable amount of foreign capital in the country. It stands to reason that these funds substantially lowered the government's financing cost, and it is unlikely that the government could have done nearly as much deficit spending without capital controls."[72]

Republic of Cyprus (2013–2015) Edit

Cyprus, a Eurozone member state which is closely linked to Greece, imposed the Eurozone's first temporary capital controls in 2013 as part of its response to the 2012–2013 Cypriot financial crisis. These capital controls were lifted in 2015, with the last controls being removed in April 2015.[73]

Greece (2015–2019) Edit

Since the Greek debt crisis intensified in the 2010s decade, Greece has implemented capital controls. At the end of August, the Greek government announced that the last capital restrictions would be lifted as of 1 September 2019, about 50 months after they were introduced.[74]

Capital controls outside Europe Edit

India (2013) Edit

In 2013, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) imposed capital outflow controls due to a rapidly weakening currency. The central bank reduced direct investment in foreign assets to one-fourth of the original. It achieved this by lowering the limit on overseas remittances from $200,000 to $75,000. Special permission had to be obtained from the central bank for any exceptions to be made.[75] The RBI reversed the measure gradually over subsequent weeks, as the Indian rupee stabilised.[76]

Adoption of prudential measures Edit

The prudential capital controls measure distinguishes itself from the general capital controls as summarized above as it is one of the prudential regulations that aims to mitigate the systemic risk, reduce the business cycle volatility, increase the macroeconomic stability, and enhance the social welfare. It generally regulates inflows only and take ex-ante policy interventions. The prudence requirement says that such regulation should curb and manage the excessive risk accumulation process with cautious forethought to prevent an emerging financial crisis and economic collapse. The ex-ante timing means that such regulation should be taken effectively before the realization of any unfettered crisis as opposed to taking policy interventions after a severe crisis already hits the economy.[citation needed]

Free movement of capital and payments Edit

 
The International Finance Centre in Hong Kong would likely oppose capital controls, and argue that they would not work.

Full freedom of movement for capital and payments has so far only been approached between individual pairings of states which have free trade agreements and relative freedom from capital controls, such as Canada and the US, or the complete freedom within regions such as the EU, with its "Four Freedoms" and the Eurozone. During the First Age of Globalization that was brought to an end by World War I, there were very few restrictions on the movement of capital, but all major economies except for the United Kingdom and the Netherlands heavily restricted payments for goods by the use of current account controls such as tariffs and duties.[11]

There is no consensus on whether capital control restrictions on the free movement of capital and payments across national borders benefits developing countries. Many economists agree that lifting capital controls while inflationary pressures persist, the country is in debt, and foreign currency reserves are low, will not be beneficial. When capital controls were lifted under these conditions in Argentina, the peso lost 30 percent of its value relative to the dollar. Most countries will lift capital controls during boom periods.[77]

According to a 2016 study, the implementation of capital controls can be beneficial in a two-country situation for the country that implements the capital controls. The effects of capital controls are more ambiguous when both countries implement capital controls.[78]

Arguments in favour of free capital movement Edit

Pro-free market economists claim the following advantages for free movement of capital:

  • It enhances overall economic growth by allowing savings to be channelled to their most productive use.[32]
  • By encouraging foreign direct investment, it helps developing economies to benefit from foreign expertise.[32]
  • Allows states to raise funds from external markets to help them mitigate a temporary recession.[32]
  • Enables both savers and borrowers to secure the best available market rate.[15]
  • When controls include taxes, funds raised are sometimes siphoned off by corrupt government officials for their personal use.[15]
  • Hawala-type traders across Asia have always been able to evade currency movement controls
  • Computer and communications technologies have made unimpeded electronic funds transfer a convenience for increasing numbers of bank customers.

Arguments in favour of capital controls Edit

Pro-capital control economists have made the following points.

  • Capital controls may represent an optimal macroprudential policy that reduces the risk of financial crises and prevents the associated externalities.[5][56][79][80]
  • Global economic growth was on average considerably higher in the Bretton Woods periods where capital controls were widely in use. Using regression analysis, economists such as Dani Rodrik have found no positive correlation between growth and free capital movement.[81]
  • Capital controls limiting a nation's residents from owning foreign assets can ensure that domestic credit is available more cheaply than would otherwise be the case. This sort of capital control is still in effect in both India and China. In India the controls encourage residents to provide cheap funds directly to the government, while in China it means that Chinese businesses have an inexpensive source of loans.[26]
  • Economic crises have been considerably more frequent since the Bretton Woods capital controls were relaxed. Even economic historians who class capital controls as repressive have concluded that capital controls, more than the period's high growth, were responsible for the infrequency of crisis.[26] Large uncontrolled capital inflows have frequently damaged a nation's economic development by causing its currency to appreciate, by contributing to inflation, and by causing unsustainable economic booms which often precede financial crises, which are in turn caused when the inflows sharply reverse and both domestic and foreign capital flee the country. The risk of crisis is especially high in developing economies where the inbound flows become loans denominated in foreign currency, so that the repayments become considerably more expensive as the developing country's currency depreciates. This is known as original sin.[11][82][83]

See also Edit

Notes and references Edit

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  2. ^ Fischer, Stanley (1997). "Capital Account Liberalization and the Role of the IMF". International Monetary Fund. Retrieved 2 April 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d Jonathan D. Ostry, Atish R. Ghosh, Karl Habermeier, Marcos Chamon, Mahvash S. Qureshi, and Dennis B.S. Reinhardt (2010-02-19). "Capital Inflows: The Role of Controls". Staff Position Note 10/04. International Monetary Fund.
  4. ^ Blanchard, Olivier; Ostry, Jonathan D. (2012-12-11). "The multilateral approach to capital controls". VoxEU.org. Retrieved 2020-03-28.
  5. ^ a b c d e Jonathan D. Ostry, Atish R. Ghosh, Karl Habermeier, Luc Laeven, Marcos Chamon, Mahvash S. Qureshi, and Annamaria Kokenyne (April 2011), "Managing Capital Inflows: What Tools to Use?", IMF Staff Discussion Notes No. 11/06. International Monetary Fund.
  6. ^ a b The Economist (February 2010), "The IMF changes its mind on controls on capital inflows".
  7. ^ a b Financial Times (February 2010), "IMF reconsiders capital controls opposition".
  8. ^ a b The Economist (April 2011), "The Reformation: A disjointed attempt by the IMF to refine its thinking on capital controls".
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  12. ^ Some of the few pre WWI capital controls had political rather than economic motivations, e.g. between Germany and France after the 1871 Franco Prussian war, but there were a few controls implemented with economic justifications, although not endorsed by mainstream economists.
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  31. ^ China and India still retain capital controls as late as 2010.
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Further reading Edit

  • States and the Reemergence of Global Finance (1994) by Eric Helleiner – Chapter 2 is excellent for the pre World War II history of capital controls and their stenghening with Bretton Woods. Remaining chapters cover their decline from the 1960s through to the early 1990s. Helleiner offers extensive additional reading for those with a deep interest in the history of capital controls.
  • Erten, Bilge, Anton Korinek, and José Antonio Ocampo. 2021. "Capital Controls: Theory and Evidence". Journal of Economic Literature, 59 (1): 45–89.

External links Edit

  • Christopher J. Neely, An introduction to capital controls (PDF), Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, November/December 1999, pp. 13–30
  • James Oliver, , University of Iowa Center for International Finance & Development
  • Ethan Kaplan, Dani Rodrik (2001)
  • Bryan Balin, India's New Capital Restrictions: What Are They, Why Were They Created, and Have They Been Effective? The Johns Hopkins University, 2008
  • José Antonio Cordero and Juan Antonio Montecino, Capital Controls and Monetary Policy in Developing Countries, Center for Economic and Policy Research, April 2010
  • Financial Times (2011) Global summary showing most of the worlds population are subject to capital controls as of 2011
  • Kevin Gallagher, , UMass, 2011
  • Anton Korinek (2011), The New Economics of Prudential Capital Controls 2016-03-11 at the Wayback Machine (PDF), IMF Economic Review 59(3), 2011

capital, control, residency, based, measures, such, transaction, taxes, other, limits, outright, prohibitions, that, nation, government, regulate, flows, from, capital, markets, into, country, capital, account, these, measures, economy, wide, sector, specific,. Capital controls are residency based measures such as transaction taxes other limits or outright prohibitions that a nation s government can use to regulate flows from capital markets into and out of the country s capital account These measures may be economy wide sector specific usually the financial sector or industry specific e g strategic industries They may apply to all flows or may differentiate by type or duration of the flow debt equity or direct investment and short term vs medium and long term Types of capital control include exchange controls that prevent or limit the buying and selling of a national currency at the market rate caps on the allowed volume for the international sale or purchase of various financial assets transaction taxes such as the proposed Tobin tax on currency exchanges minimum stay requirements requirements for mandatory approval or even limits on the amount of money a private citizen is allowed to remove from the country There have been several shifts of opinion on whether capital controls are beneficial and in what circumstances they should be used Capital controls were an integral part of the Bretton Woods system which emerged after World War II and lasted until the early 1970s This period was the first time capital controls had been endorsed by mainstream economics Capital controls were relatively easy to impose in part because international capital markets were less active in general 1 In the 1970s economic liberal free market economists became increasingly successful in persuading their colleagues that capital controls were in the main harmful The US other Western governments and multilateral financial institutions such as the International Monetary Fund IMF and the World Bank began to take a critical view of capital controls and persuaded many countries to abandon them to facilitate financial globalization 2 The Latin American debt crisis of the early 1980s the East Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s the Russian ruble crisis of 1998 1999 and the global financial crisis of 2008 highlighted the risks associated with the volatility of capital flows and led many countries even those with relatively open capital accounts to make use of capital controls alongside macroeconomic and prudential policies as means to dampen the effects of volatile flows on their economies In the aftermath of the global financial crisis as capital inflows surged to emerging market economies a group of economists at the IMF outlined the elements of a policy toolkit to manage the macroeconomic and financial stability risks associated with capital flow volatility The proposed toolkit allowed a role for capital controls 3 4 The study as well as a successor study focusing on financial stability concerns stemming from capital flow volatility 5 while not representing an IMF official view were nevertheless influential in generating debate among policy makers and the international community and ultimately in bringing about a shift in the institutional position of the IMF 6 7 8 With the increased use of capital controls in recent years the IMF has moved to destigmatize the use of capital controls alongside macroeconomic and prudential policies to deal with capital flow volatility 9 More widespread use of capital controls raises a host of multilateral coordination issues as enunciated for example by the G 20 echoing the concerns voiced by John Maynard Keynes and Harry Dexter White more than six decades ago 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre World War I 1 2 World War I to World War II 1914 1945 1 3 Bretton Woods era 1945 1971 1 4 Post Bretton Woods era 1971 2009 1 5 After the global financial crisis 2009 2012 1 6 Impossible trinity trilemma 2 Examples since 2013 2 1 Capital controls in the European Single Market and EFTA 2 1 1 Iceland 2008 2017 2 1 2 Republic of Cyprus 2013 2015 2 1 3 Greece 2015 2019 2 2 Capital controls outside Europe 2 2 1 India 2013 3 Adoption of prudential measures 4 Free movement of capital and payments 4 1 Arguments in favour of free capital movement 4 2 Arguments in favour of capital controls 5 See also 6 Notes and references 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditPre World War I Edit Prior to the 19th century there was generally little need for capital controls due to low levels of international trade and financial integration In the First Age of Globalization which is generally dated from 1870 to 1914 capital controls remained largely absent 11 12 World War I to World War II 1914 1945 Edit Highly restrictive capital controls were introduced with the outbreak of World War I In the 1920s they were generally relaxed only to be strengthened again in the wake of the 1929 Great Crash This was more an ad hoc response to potentially damaging flows rather than based on a change in normative economic theory Economic historian Barry Eichengreen has implied that the use of capital controls peaked during World War II but the more general view is that the most wide ranging implementation occurred after Bretton Woods 11 13 14 15 An example of capital control in the interwar period was the Reich Flight Tax introduced in 1931 by German Chancellor Heinrich Bruning The tax was needed to limit the removal of capital from the country by wealthy residents At the time Germany was suffering economic hardship due to the Great Depression and the harsh war reparations imposed after World War I Following the ascension of the Nazis to power in 1933 the tax was repurposed to confiscate money and property from Jews fleeing the state sponsored antisemitism 16 17 18 Bretton Woods era 1945 1971 Edit nbsp A widespread system of capital controls were decided upon at the international 1944 conference at Bretton Woods At the end of World War II international capital was caged by the imposition of strong and wide ranging capital controls as part of the newly created Bretton Woods system it was perceived that this would help protect the interests of ordinary people and the wider economy These measures were popular as at this time the western public s view of international bankers was generally very low blaming them for the Great Depression 19 20 John Maynard Keynes one of the principal architects of the Bretton Woods system envisaged capital controls as a permanent feature of the international monetary system 21 though he had agreed current account convertibility should be adopted once international conditions had stabilised sufficiently This essentially meant that currencies were to be freely convertible for the purposes of international trade in goods and services but not for capital account transactions Most industrial economies relaxed their controls around 1958 to allow this to happen 22 The other leading architect of Bretton Woods the American Harry Dexter White and his boss Henry Morgenthau were somewhat less radical than Keynes but still agreed on the need for permanent capital controls In his closing address to the Bretton Woods conference Morgenthau spoke of how the measures adopted would drive the usurious money lenders from the temple of international finance 19 Following the Keynesian Revolution the first two decades after World War II saw little argument against capital controls from economists though an exception was Milton Friedman From the late 1950s the effectiveness of capital controls began to break down in part due to innovations such as the Eurodollar market According to Dani Rodrik it is unclear to what extent this was due to an unwillingness on the part of governments to respond effectively as compared with an inability to do so 21 Eric Helleiner posits that heavy lobbying from Wall Street bankers was a factor in persuading American authorities not to subject the Eurodollar market to capital controls From the late 1960s the prevailing opinion among economists began to switch to the view that capital controls are on the whole more harmful than beneficial 23 24 While many of the capital controls in this era were directed at international financiers and banks some were directed at individual citizens In the 1960s British individuals were at one point restricted from taking more than 50 with them out of the country for their foreign holidays 25 In their book This Time Is Different 2009 economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff suggest that the use of capital controls in this period even more than its rapid economic growth was responsible for the very low level of banking crises that occurred in the Bretton Woods era 26 According to Barry Eichengreen capital controls were more effective in the 1940s and 1950s than they were subsequently 27 Post Bretton Woods era 1971 2009 Edit By the late 1970s as part of the displacement of Keynesianism in favour of free market orientated policies and theories and the shift from the social liberal paradigm to neoliberalism countries began abolishing their capital controls starting between 1973 and 1974 with the US Canada Germany and Switzerland and followed by the United Kingdom in 1979 28 Most other advanced and emerging economies followed chiefly in the 1980s and early 1990s 11 During the period spanning from approximately 1980 2009 the normative opinion was that capital controls were to be avoided except perhaps in a crisis It was widely held that the absence of controls allowed capital to freely flow to where it is needed most helping not only investors to enjoy good returns but also helping ordinary people to benefit from economic growth 29 During the 1980s many emerging economies decided or were coerced into following the advanced economies by abandoning their capital controls though over 50 retained them at least partially 11 30 The orthodox view that capital controls are a bad thing was challenged following the 1997 Asian financial crisis Asian nations that had retained their capital controls such as India and China could credit them for allowing them to escape the crisis relatively unscathed 26 31 Malaysia s prime minister Mahathir bin Mohamad imposed capital controls as an emergency measure in September 1998 both strict exchange controls and limits on outflows from portfolio investments these were found to be effective in containing the damage from the crisis 11 32 33 In the early 1990s even some pro globalization economists like Jagdish Bhagwati 34 and some writers in publications like The Economist 32 35 spoke out in favor of a limited role for capital controls While many developing world economies lost faith in the free market consensus it remained strong among Western nations 11 After the global financial crisis 2009 2012 Edit By 2009 the global financial crisis had caused a resurgence in Keynesian thought which reversed the previously prevailing orthodoxy 36 During the 2008 2011 Icelandic financial crisis the IMF proposed that capital controls on outflows should be imposed by Iceland calling them an essential feature of the monetary policy framework given the scale of potential capital outflows 37 In the latter half of 2009 as the global economy started to recover from the global financial crisis capital inflows to emerging market economies especially in Asia and Latin America surged raising macroeconomic and financial stability risks Several emerging market economies responded to these concerns by adopting capital controls or macroprudential measures Brazil imposed a tax on the purchase of financial assets by foreigners and Taiwan restricted overseas investors from buying time deposits 38 The partial return to favor of capital controls is linked to a wider emerging consensus among policy makers for the greater use of macroprudential policy According to economics journalist Paul Mason international agreement for the global adoption of Macro prudential policy was reached at the 2009 G20 Pittsburgh summit an agreement which Mason said had seemed impossible at the London summit which took place only a few months before 39 Pro capital control statements by various prominent economists together with an influential staff position note prepared by IMF economists in February 2010 Jonathan D Ostry et al 2010 and a follow up note prepared in April 2011 5 have been hailed as an end of an era that eventually led to a change in the IMF s long held position that capital controls should be used only in extremis as a last resort and on a temporary basis 3 6 7 8 40 41 42 43 In June 2010 the Financial Times published several articles on the growing trend towards using capital controls They noted influential voices from the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank had joined the IMF in advising there is a role for capital controls The FT reported on the recent tightening of controls in Indonesia South Korea Taiwan Brazil and Russia In Indonesia recently implemented controls include a one month minimum holding period for certain securities In South Korea limits have been placed on currency forward positions In Taiwan the access that foreigner investors have to certain bank deposits has been restricted The FT cautioned that imposing controls has a downside including the creation of possible future problems in attracting funds 44 45 46 By September 2010 emerging economies had experienced huge capital inflows resulting from carry trades made attractive to market participants by the expansionary monetary policies several large economies had undertaken over the previous two years as a response to the crisis clarification needed This has led to countries such as Brazil Mexico Peru Colombia South Korea Taiwan South Africa Russia and Poland further reviewing the possibility of increasing their capital controls as a response 47 48 In October 2010 with reference to increased concern about capital flows and widespread talk of an imminent currency war financier George Soros has suggested that capital controls are going to become much more widely used over the next few years 49 50 Several analysts have questioned whether controls will be effective for most countries with Chile s finance minister saying his country had no plans to use them 51 52 53 In February 2011 citing evidence from new IMF research Jonathan D Ostry et al 2010 that restricting short term capital inflows could lower financial stability risks 3 over 250 economists headed by Joseph Stiglitz wrote a letter to the Obama administration asking them to remove clauses from various bilateral trade agreements that allow the use of capital controls to be penalized 54 There was strong counter lobbying by business and so far the US administration has not acted on the call although some figures such as Treasury secretary Tim Geithner have spoken out in support of capital controls at least in certain circumstances 24 55 Econometric analyses undertaken by the IMF 56 and other academic economists found that in general countries which deployed capital controls weathered the 2008 crisis better than comparable countries which did not 3 5 24 In April 2011 the IMF published its first ever set of guidelines for the use of capital controls 57 58 At the 2011 G 20 Cannes summit the G20 agreed that developing countries should have even greater freedom to use capital controls than the IMF guidelines allow 59 A few weeks later the Bank of England published a paper where they broadly welcomed the G20 s decision in favor of even greater use of capital controls though they caution that compared to developing countries advanced economies may find it harder to implement efficient controls 60 Not all momentum has been in favor of increased use of capital controls however In December 2011 China partially loosened its controls on inbound capital flows which the Financial Times described as reflecting an ongoing desire by Chinese authorities for further liberalization 61 India also lifted some of its controls on inbound capital in early January 2012 drawing criticism from economist Arvind Subramanian who considers relaxing capital controls a good policy for China but not for India considering her different economic circumstances 62 In September 2012 Michael W Klein of Tufts University challenged the emergent consensus that short term capital controls can be beneficial publishing a preliminary study that found the measures used by countries like Brazil had been ineffective at least up to 2010 Klein argues it was only countries with long term capital controls such as China and India that have enjoyed measurable protection from adverse capital flows 63 In the same month Ila Patnaik and Ajay Shah of the NIPFP published an article about the permanent and comprehensive capital controls in India which seem to have been ineffective in achieving the goals of macroeconomic policy 64 Other studies have found that capital controls may lower financial stability risks 5 56 while the controls Brazilian authorities adopted after the 2008 financial crisis did have some beneficial effect on Brazil itself 65 Capital controls may have externalities Some empirical studies find that capital flows were diverted to other countries as capital controls were tightened in Brazil 66 67 An IMF staff discussion note Jonathan D Ostry et al 2012 explores the multilateral consequences of capital controls and the desirability of international cooperation to achieve globally efficient outcomes It flags three issues of potential concern First is the possibility that capital controls may be used as a substitute for warranted external adjustment such as when inflow controls are used to sustain an undervalued currency Second the imposition of capital controls by one country may deflect some capital towards other recipient countries exacerbating their inflow problem Third policies in source countries including monetary policy may exacerbate problems faced by capital receiving countries if they increase the volume or riskiness of capital flows The paper posits that if capital controls are justified from a national standpoint in terms of reducing domestic distortions then under a range of circumstances they should be pursued even if they give rise to cross border spillovers If policies in one country exacerbate existing distortions in other countries and it is costly for other countries to respond then multilateral coordination of unilateral policies is likely to be beneficial Coordination may require borrowers to reduce inflow controls or an agreement with lenders to partially internalize the risks from excessively large or risky outflows 10 In December 2012 the IMF published a staff paper which further expanded on their recent support for the limited use of capital controls 43 Impossible trinity trilemma Edit The history of capital controls is sometimes discussed in relation to the impossible trinity trilemma the unholy trinity the finding that its impossible for a nation s economic policy to simultaneously deliver more than two of the following three desirable macroeconomic goals namely a fixed exchange rate an independent monetary policy and free movement for capital absence of capital controls 15 In the First Age of Globalization governments largely chose to pursue a stable exchange rate while allowing freedom of movement for capital The sacrifice was that their monetary policy was largely dictated by international conditions not by the needs of the domestic economy In the Bretton Woods period governments were free to have both generally stable exchange rates and independent monetary policies at the price of capital controls The impossible trinity concept was especially influential during this era as a justification for capital controls In the Washington Consensus period advanced economies generally chose to allow freedom of capital and to continue maintaining an independent monetary policy while accepting a floating or semi floating exchange rate 11 24 Examples since 2013 EditCapital controls in the European Single Market and EFTA Edit The free flow of capital is one of the Four Freedoms of the European Single Market Despite the progress that has been made Europe s capital markets remain fragmented along national lines and European economies remain heavily reliant on the banking sector for their funding needs 68 Within the building on the Investment Plan for Europe for a closer integration of capital markets the European Commission adopted in 2015 the Action Plan on Building a Capital Markets Union CMU setting out a list of key measures to achieve a true single market for capital in Europe which deepens the existing Banking Union because this revolves around disintermediated market based forms of financing which should represent an alternative to the traditionally predominant in Europe bank based financing channel 69 The project is a political signal to strengthen the European Single Market as a project of European Union EU s 28 member states instead of just the Eurozone countries and sent a strong signal to the UK to remain an active part of the EU before Brexit 70 There have been three instances of capital controls in the EU and European Free Trade Association EFTA since 2008 all of them triggered by banking crises Iceland 2008 2017 Edit In its 2008 financial crisis Iceland a member of the EFTA but not of the EU imposed capital controls due to the collapse of its banking system Iceland s government said in June 2015 that it planned to lift them however since the announced plans included a tax on taking capital out of the country arguably they still constituted capital controls The Icelandic government announced that capital controls had been lifted on 12 March 2017 71 In 2017 University of California Berkeley economist Jon Steinsson said that he had opposed the introduction of capital controls in Iceland during the crisis but that the experience in Iceland had made him change his mind commenting The government needed to finance very large deficits The imposition of capital controls locked a considerable amount of foreign capital in the country It stands to reason that these funds substantially lowered the government s financing cost and it is unlikely that the government could have done nearly as much deficit spending without capital controls 72 Republic of Cyprus 2013 2015 Edit Cyprus a Eurozone member state which is closely linked to Greece imposed the Eurozone s first temporary capital controls in 2013 as part of its response to the 2012 2013 Cypriot financial crisis These capital controls were lifted in 2015 with the last controls being removed in April 2015 73 Greece 2015 2019 Edit Main article Capital controls in Greece Since the Greek debt crisis intensified in the 2010s decade Greece has implemented capital controls At the end of August the Greek government announced that the last capital restrictions would be lifted as of 1 September 2019 about 50 months after they were introduced 74 Capital controls outside Europe Edit India 2013 Edit In 2013 the Reserve Bank of India RBI imposed capital outflow controls due to a rapidly weakening currency The central bank reduced direct investment in foreign assets to one fourth of the original It achieved this by lowering the limit on overseas remittances from 200 000 to 75 000 Special permission had to be obtained from the central bank for any exceptions to be made 75 The RBI reversed the measure gradually over subsequent weeks as the Indian rupee stabilised 76 Adoption of prudential measures EditThe prudential capital controls measure distinguishes itself from the general capital controls as summarized above as it is one of the prudential regulations that aims to mitigate the systemic risk reduce the business cycle volatility increase the macroeconomic stability and enhance the social welfare It generally regulates inflows only and take ex ante policy interventions The prudence requirement says that such regulation should curb and manage the excessive risk accumulation process with cautious forethought to prevent an emerging financial crisis and economic collapse The ex ante timing means that such regulation should be taken effectively before the realization of any unfettered crisis as opposed to taking policy interventions after a severe crisis already hits the economy citation needed Free movement of capital and payments Edit nbsp The International Finance Centre in Hong Kong would likely oppose capital controls and argue that they would not work Full freedom of movement for capital and payments has so far only been approached between individual pairings of states which have free trade agreements and relative freedom from capital controls such as Canada and the US or the complete freedom within regions such as the EU with its Four Freedoms and the Eurozone During the First Age of Globalization that was brought to an end by World War I there were very few restrictions on the movement of capital but all major economies except for the United Kingdom and the Netherlands heavily restricted payments for goods by the use of current account controls such as tariffs and duties 11 There is no consensus on whether capital control restrictions on the free movement of capital and payments across national borders benefits developing countries Many economists agree that lifting capital controls while inflationary pressures persist the country is in debt and foreign currency reserves are low will not be beneficial When capital controls were lifted under these conditions in Argentina the peso lost 30 percent of its value relative to the dollar Most countries will lift capital controls during boom periods 77 According to a 2016 study the implementation of capital controls can be beneficial in a two country situation for the country that implements the capital controls The effects of capital controls are more ambiguous when both countries implement capital controls 78 Arguments in favour of free capital movement Edit Pro free market economists claim the following advantages for free movement of capital It enhances overall economic growth by allowing savings to be channelled to their most productive use 32 By encouraging foreign direct investment it helps developing economies to benefit from foreign expertise 32 Allows states to raise funds from external markets to help them mitigate a temporary recession 32 Enables both savers and borrowers to secure the best available market rate 15 When controls include taxes funds raised are sometimes siphoned off by corrupt government officials for their personal use 15 Hawala type traders across Asia have always been able to evade currency movement controls Computer and communications technologies have made unimpeded electronic funds transfer a convenience for increasing numbers of bank customers Arguments in favour of capital controls Edit Pro capital control economists have made the following points Capital controls may represent an optimal macroprudential policy that reduces the risk of financial crises and prevents the associated externalities 5 56 79 80 Global economic growth was on average considerably higher in the Bretton Woods periods where capital controls were widely in use Using regression analysis economists such as Dani Rodrik have found no positive correlation between growth and free capital movement 81 Capital controls limiting a nation s residents from owning foreign assets can ensure that domestic credit is available more cheaply than would otherwise be the case This sort of capital control is still in effect in both India and China In India the controls encourage residents to provide cheap funds directly to the government while in China it means that Chinese businesses have an inexpensive source of loans 26 Economic crises have been considerably more frequent since the Bretton Woods capital controls were relaxed Even economic historians who class capital controls as repressive have concluded that capital controls more than the period s high growth were responsible for the infrequency of crisis 26 Large uncontrolled capital inflows have frequently damaged a nation s economic development by causing its currency to appreciate by contributing to inflation and by causing unsustainable economic booms which often precede financial crises which are in turn caused when the inflows sharply reverse and both domestic and foreign capital flee the country The risk of crisis is especially high in developing economies where the inbound flows become loans denominated in foreign currency so that the repayments become considerably more expensive as the developing country s currency depreciates This is known as original sin 11 82 83 See also EditPrudential capital controls Price control Bretton Woods System Embedded liberalism Impossible trinity Mundell Fleming model Financial repression Macroprudential policyNotes and references Edit Frieden Jeffry Martin Lisa 2003 International Political Economy Global and Domestic Interactions Political Science The State of the Discipline W W Norton p 121 Fischer Stanley 1997 Capital Account Liberalization and the Role of the IMF International Monetary Fund Retrieved 2 April 2014 a b c d Jonathan D Ostry Atish R Ghosh Karl Habermeier Marcos Chamon Mahvash S Qureshi and Dennis B S Reinhardt 2010 02 19 Capital Inflows The Role of Controls Staff Position Note 10 04 International Monetary Fund Blanchard Olivier Ostry Jonathan D 2012 12 11 The multilateral approach to capital controls VoxEU org Retrieved 2020 03 28 a b c d e Jonathan D Ostry Atish R Ghosh Karl Habermeier Luc Laeven Marcos Chamon Mahvash S Qureshi and Annamaria Kokenyne April 2011 Managing Capital Inflows What Tools to Use IMF Staff Discussion Notes No 11 06 International Monetary Fund a b The Economist February 2010 The IMF changes its mind on controls on capital inflows a b Financial Times February 2010 IMF reconsiders capital controls opposition a b The Economist April 2011 The Reformation A disjointed attempt by the IMF to refine its thinking on capital controls Mercurio Bryan 2023 Capital Controls and International Economic Law Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 51743 7 a b Jonathan D Ostry Atish R Ghosh and Anton Korinek 2012b Multilateral Aspects of Managing the Capital Account SDN 12 10 International Monetary Fund a b c d e f g h i Eirc Helleiner Louis W Pauly et al 2005 John Ravenhill ed Global Political Economy Oxford University Press pp 7 15 154 177 204 ISBN 0 19 926584 4 Some of the few pre WWI capital controls had political rather than economic motivations e g between Germany and France after the 1871 Franco Prussian war but there were a few controls implemented with economic justifications although not endorsed by mainstream economists Barry Eichengreen 2008 chp 1 Globalizing Capital A History of the International Monetary System Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13937 1 Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff 2008 04 16 This Time is Different A Panoramic View of Eight Centuries of Financial Crises PDF Harvard p 8 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 07 13 Retrieved 2010 05 28 a b c d 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2008 Reaping the Benefits of Financial Globalization IMF Occasional Paper No 264 International Monetary Fund James M Boughton Silent Revolution The International Monetary Fund 1979 1989 International Monetary Fund Retrieved 2009 09 07 China and India still retain capital controls as late as 2010 a b c d e Kate Galbraith ed 2001 Globalisation The Economist pp 286 290 ISBN 1 86197 348 9 Masahiro Kawai Shinji Takagi 2003 05 01 Rethinking Capital Controls The Malaysian Experience PDF Ministry of Finance Japan Archived from the original PDF on 2011 03 24 Retrieved 2010 05 28 Jagdish Bhagwati 2004 In defense of Globalization Oxford University Press pp 199 207 The Economist 2003 A place for capital controls Chris Giles Ralph Atkins Krishna Guha The undeniable shift to Keynes Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2009 01 23 IMF Completes First Review Under Stand By Arrangement with Iceland Extends Arrangement and Approves US 167 5 Million Disbursement Press Release No 09 375 October 28 2009 A Beattie K Brown P Garnham J Wheatley S Jung a J Lau 2009 11 19 Worried nations try to cool hot money Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2009 12 15 Paul Mason journalist 2010 Meltdown The End of the Age of Greed 2nd ed Verso pp 196 199 ISBN 978 1 84467 653 8 Dani Rodrik 2010 03 11 The End of an Era in Finance Project Syndicate Retrieved 2010 05 24 Kevin Gallagher 2010 03 01 Capital controls back in IMF toolkit The Guardian Retrieved 2010 05 24 Arvind Subramanian 2009 11 18 Time For Coordinated Capital Account Controls The Baseline Scenario Retrieved 2009 12 15 a b The Liberalization and Management of Capital Flows An Institutional View PDF International Monetary Fund 2012 12 03 Retrieved 2012 12 04 Lex team 2010 06 10 Capital controls Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2010 07 01 Song Jung 2010 06 14 Seoul curbs capital flows to rein in won fluctuations Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2010 07 01 Kevin Brown 2010 06 30 Asia toys with introducing capital controls Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2010 07 01 Ambrose Evans Pritchard 2010 09 29 Capital controls eyed as global currency wars escalate The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 2010 09 29 West inflates EM super bubble Financial Times 2010 09 29 Retrieved 2010 09 29 George Soros 2010 10 07 China must fix the global currency crisis Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2010 10 14 China Must Fix the Global Currency Crisis George Soros Retrieved 2023 02 10 Chile Not Planning Capital Controls For Region Beating Peso Larrain Says Bloomberg L P 2010 10 09 Retrieved 2010 10 14 Sebastian Mallaby 2011 04 14 The IMF needs to find its voice again Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2011 12 15 Ragnar Arnason Jon Danielsson 2011 11 14 Capital controls are exactly wrong for Iceland Vox EU Retrieved 2011 12 15 Hausmann Ricardo Stiglitz Joseph et al 31 January 2011 CapCtrlsLetter PDF Tufts University Archived from the original PDF on 24 January 2012 Retrieved 28 September 2021 US business defends capital controls in trade pacts Reuters 2011 02 08 Retrieved 2011 06 24 a b c Jonathan D Ostry Atish R Ghosh Marcos Chamon Mahvash S Qureshi 2012a Tools for Managing Financial Stability Risks from Capital Inflows Journal of International Economics vol 88 2 pp 407 421 Robin Harding 2011 04 05 IMF gives ground on capital controls Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2011 04 16 IMF staffers 2011 04 05 IMF Develops Framework to Manage Capital Inflows International Monetary Fund Retrieved 2011 04 16 Kevin Gallagher 2010 11 29 The IMF must heed G20 decisions The Guardian Retrieved 2011 12 15 Oliver Bush Katie Farrant Michelle Wright 2011 12 09 Reform of the International Monetary and Financial System PDF Bank of England Archived from the original PDF on 2011 12 18 Retrieved 2011 12 15 Simon Rabinovitch 2011 12 18 China opens up to offshore renminbi investors Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2011 12 20 Arvind Subramanian 2012 01 09 China and India right policy wrong place Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved 2012 01 17 Capital Controls Gates and Walls Archived January 14 2013 at the Wayback Machine by Michael W Klein Tufts September 2012 Did the Indian capital controls work as a tool of macroeconomic policy IMF Economic Review September 2012 Navigating Capital Flows in Brazil and Chile by Brittany Baumann and Kevin Gallagher BU June 2012 Capital Controls and Spillover Effects Evidence from Latin American Countries by Frederic J Lambert Julio Ramos Tallada and Cyril Rebillard Banque de France December 2011 Bubble Thy Neighbor Portfolio Effects and Externalities from Capital Controls by Kristin J Forbes MIT April 2012 Mid term review of the capital markets union action plan European Commission European Commission Retrieved 2019 12 23 Vertesy Laszlo 2019 The legal and regulatory aspects of the free movement of capital towards the Capital Markets Union Journal of Legal Theory HU 4 110 128 Ringe Wolf Georg 2015 03 09 Capital Markets Union for Europe A Political Message to the UK Rochester NY SSRN 2575654 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Iceland Lifts Capital Controls Prime Minister s Office Retrieved 2017 05 25 Steinsson Jon 2017 Comment on The rise the fall and the resurrection of Iceland PDF Cyprus lifts all capital controls as banks recover BBC News 6 April 2015 permanent dead link Greece ends capital controls after 50 months www euractiv com 2019 08 26 Capital Controls Corporate Finance Institute Retrieved 2023 02 19 Nair Vishwanath 2015 06 29 Five countries that have used capital controls recently mint Retrieved 2023 02 19 Here s why Argentina s new president Macri let the peso crash The Washington Post Retrieved 8 September 2019 Heathcote Jonathan Perri Fabrizio 2016 05 01 On the Desirability of Capital Controls PDF IMF Economic Review 64 1 75 102 doi 10 1057 imfer 2016 7 ISSN 2041 417X S2CID 44648892 Anton Korinek The New Economics of Prudential Capital Controls PDF IMF Economic Review 59 3 pp 523 561 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 06 Retrieved 2011 12 09 Anton Korinek 2010 05 01 Regulating Capital Flows to Emerging Markets An Externality View PDF University of Maryland Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 08 Retrieved 2011 07 12 Rodrik Dani 1998 Who Needs Capital Account Convertability PDF Harvard University Archived from the original PDF on 2023 07 24 Eswar S Prasad Raghuram G Rajan Arvind Subramanian 2007 04 16 Foreign Capital and Economic Growth PDF Peterson Institute Archived from the original PDF on 2009 12 14 Retrieved 2009 12 15 Heakal Reem Understanding Capital And Financial Accounts In The Balance Of Payments Investopedia Retrieved 2009 12 11 Further reading EditStates and the Reemergence of Global Finance 1994 by Eric Helleiner Chapter 2 is excellent for the pre World War II history of capital controls and their stenghening with Bretton Woods Remaining chapters cover their decline from the 1960s through to the early 1990s Helleiner offers extensive additional reading for those with a deep interest in the history of capital controls Erten Bilge Anton Korinek and Jose Antonio Ocampo 2021 Capital Controls Theory and Evidence Journal of Economic Literature 59 1 45 89 External links EditChristopher J Neely An introduction to capital controls PDF Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Review November December 1999 pp 13 30 James Oliver What are Capital Controls University of Iowa Center for International Finance amp Development Ethan Kaplan Dani Rodrik 2001 Did the Malaysian capital controls work NBER Working Paper No 8142 Bryan Balin India s New Capital Restrictions What Are They Why Were They Created and Have They Been Effective The Johns Hopkins University 2008 Jose Antonio Cordero and Juan Antonio Montecino Capital Controls and Monetary Policy in Developing Countries Center for Economic and Policy Research April 2010 Financial Times 2011 Global summary showing most of the worlds population are subject to capital controls as of 2011 Kevin Gallagher Regaining control detailed paper on the use of capital controls post WWII with emphases on the increased use after the 2008 crises UMass 2011 Anton Korinek 2011 The New Economics of Prudential Capital Controls Archived 2016 03 11 at the Wayback Machine PDF IMF Economic Review 59 3 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capital control amp oldid 1169959685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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