The
author argues that the recurring balance
of payment crises in developing countries
and the enormous current account deficit
in the United States are proofs of global
economic disgovernance. Both these sources
of instability are related with current
account deficits and overvalued currencies;
results of what political economists define
as exchange rate populism. Such a policy
is not surprising in developing countries,
but it could be so in a developed country
like the United States.. Yet, when one
considers the political and social retrocession
that the American society is experiencing
since the end of World War II, it is not.
October 13, 2008.
This paper was originally presented to
the conference "The Political Economy
of Governance" sponsored by the Centre
d’Etudes Monétaires et Financières
- LATEC (Umr Cnrs), Dijon, December 2-3,
2005. This is a revised version of January
15, 2006. |