Supported by
Ford Foundation, US and Action Aid, UK
International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs)
in partnership with the School of Economics and Management,
Tsinghua University, Beijing and the School of Economics,
Renmin University, Beijing, China held the conference
on ''Re-regulating Global Finance in the Light of
the Global Crisis'', over 9-12 April, in Beijing,
China.
The spread of financial crisis from developing countries
in the 1990s to developed countries in the new millennium
and the translation of the financial crisis into a
deep real economy recession have raised the question
of the adequacy of financial regulation and supervision
in both national and global financial markets. The
sub-prime mortgage crisis in the United States had
global implications through its impact on financial
markets and real economies in a number of countries,
but most importantly because the regulatory and supervisory
systems of developed countries have provided the pattern
for best practice regulation recommended to developing
countries in order to strengthen the resilience of
their financial systems and to increase financial
stability. If developed country regulatory systems
are also subject to systemic fragility it raises the
question of what the optimal system of regulation
should be to ensure global stability and to meet particular
financing needs such as those in developing countries.
The crisis has raised a number of issues. First, despite
some agreement on the proximate determinants of the
crisis, there is substantial divergence of opinion
on ''root'' causes, in particular the role of post-liberalization
changes in regulatory structures in creating the environment
that led up to the crisis. Second, there is disagreement
on the appropriate set of policies-injecting liquidity,
recapitalising banks, cutting interest rates or providing
a fiscal stimulus (for example)-that would prevent
the transition from a recession to Depression and
trigger a recovery. Third, while there is a consensus
that changes in the regulatory structures that govern
finance are needed nationally and globally, with the
concomitant creation of a new global financial architecture,
the specific changes are hotly contested.
The conference, held over three and a half days, brought
together academics, policy makers and practitioners
from developed and developing countries. It had two
policy plenary in which political representatives
and leading policy makers participated, interspersed
with academic sessions over these three and a half
days.
The conference was supported by Ford Foundation, USA
and Action Aid, UK.
The programme of the conference follows below with
links to the
papers /presentations.
Re-regulating Global Finance in the Light of the Global
Crisis
Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, 9-12 April 2009.
(Click
for the Conference Report)
April 9, 2009
9.00 am - 9.30 am
Welcome
Jayati Ghosh
Wu Dong
Leonardo Burlamaqui (Presentation)
John Samuel
9.30 am - 11.00 am
The Crisis and the Regulatory
Challenge
Chair:
Arturo O’Connell
Jan Kregel, ''Re-regulating
finance: Using Minsky to Learn from the crisis'' (Paper) (Presentation)
C.P. Chandrasekhar ''Learning
from the crisis: Is there a Model for Global Banking?''
(Paper) (Presentation)
Discussant: Dic Lo
11.30 am - 1.00 pm
Stabilising the International
Financial System
Chair:
Yu Yongding
Prabhat Patnaik, ''Excessive
Liquidity Preference'' (Paper)
Yilmaz Akyuz, ''Stabilizing
the International Financial System: Key Issues for
Developing Countries'' (Presentation)
Discussant: Michael Pettis
2.00 pm - 3.30 pm
Finance and the Real Economy
Chair: Zhang Yu
Jayati Ghosh, ''The Unnatural
Coupling: Food and Global Finance''
(Paper) (Presentation)
Saul Keifman, ''Hello Global
Financial Crash! Good-bye Financial Globalization?''
(Paper) (Presentation)
Discussant: Juan Carlos
Moreno Brid
4.00 pm - 6.00 pm
Public Panel on Policy
Directions
Chair: Pasuk Pongphaichit
Jan A Kregel
Jomo K.S. (Presentation)
Y.V. Reddy
Arturo O'Connell
April 10, 2009
9.30 am - 11.00 am
Is Global Keynesianism
Possible?
Chair: Jomo K. Sundaram
Harry Shutt, ''Redistribution
and Stability: Beyond the Keynesian/Neoliberal Impasse''
(Paper) (Presentation)
Massimiliano La Marca, ''The
Global Economic Crisis: Systemic Failures and Multilateral
Remedies" (Paper) (Presentation)
Discussant: Martin Khor
11.30 am - 1.00 pm
Dealing with the Crisis
Chair: Leonardo Burlamaqui
Mario Tonveronachi, ''Some
Preliminary Proposals for Re-regulating Financial
Systems'' (Paper) (Presentation)
Ping Chen, ''Three Dimensions
of the Current Economic Crisis'' (Paper) (Presentation)
Discussant: Nobuharu
Yokokawa (Presentation)
2.00 pm - 3.30 pm
The Policy Response in
Developed Countries
Chair: Y.V. Reddy
Todd Tucker, ''The U.S.
Response to the Crisis, and the Trade-Policy Blindspot"
(Paper)
Carlo Panico, ''European
Policy Reactions to the Financial Crisis'' (Paper)
Discussant: Enrico Wolleb
4.00 pm - 6.00 pm
Public Panel on China
Chair: Zhao Lei
Xu Jiangkang
Cui Zhiyuan
Zhao Changhui
Zhang Yu
Andong Zhu
(Presentation)
April 11, 2009
9.30 am - 11.00 am
The Nature of the Crisis
Chair: Rashed Titumir
Zhao Lei, ''Crisis of Finance
or Overproduction?'' (Presentation)
Erinc Yeldan ''On the Nature
and Causes of the Collapse of the Wealth of Nations
2007-08: The End of a Facade Called Globalisation''
(Paper) (Presentation)
Discussant: Praveen Jha
11.30 am - 1 .00 pm
Policy Responses in Developing
Countries I
Chair: Dashu Wang
Martin Khor
Hendri Saparini, ''Policy
Response to Overcome Crisis: A Lesson from Indonesian
Case'' (Paper) (Presentation)
Discussant: R. Ramakumar
2.00 pm - 3.30 pm
Policy Responses in Developing
Countries II
Chair: Terry McKinley
Juan Carlos Moreno, ''Mexican
Economy Facing the International Crisis'' (Paper)
Noemi Levy, ''High Liquidity
and Reduced Finance: An Important Cause of Economic
Recession in Developing Countries'' (Paper) (Presentation)
Discussant: Saul Keifman
4.00 pm - 6.00 pm
Panel on New Directions
in Regulation
Chair: Jan Kregel
Yilmaz Akyuz
Prabhat Patnaik
Arturo O’Connell
Jomo K. Sundaram
YV Reddy
Yu Yong Ding
April 12, 2009
9.30 am - 11.00 am
Special Session on New
Initiatives for Governing Finance and Economic Justice
Leonardo Burlamaqui, Ford Foundation
Sandeep Chachra, Action Aid
April 15, 2009.
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