------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (December 2004)
Maurice Obstfeld and Alan M. Taylor, _Global Capital Markets:
Integration, Crisis and Growth_. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2004. xviii + 354 pp. $65/=A345 (hardback), ISBN: 0-521-63317-6.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Marc D. Weidenmier, Department of Economics,
Claremont McKenna College.
Obstfeld and Taylor survey the history of international capital
markets from the classical gold standard to today using modern
economic theory in their monograph, _Global Capital Markets:
Integration, Crisis and Growth_. The authors synthesize history and
modern economic theory to produce an illuminating discussion of the
forces that drive international financial market integration. The
book is divided into four parts. Part One reviews the theoretical
foundations of open economy macroeconomics and outlines the basic
argument of the book. Obstfeld and Taylor discuss how international
capital markets allow residents of different countries to pool risks,
impose discipline upon governments, and allow countries with very
little domestic savings to borrow abroad so that they can pursue
growth policies. The authors also introduce the open economy
macroeconomic policy trilemma to provide a theoretical framework for
their subsequent historical and economic analyses. The open economy
macroeconomic trilemma states that a country can pursue at most two
elements of the "inconsistent trinity": (1) open capital markets, (2)
independent monetary policy, and (3) a fixed exchange rate.
Obstfeld and Taylor analyze the historical development of global
capital markets in Part 2. They employ quantity and price evidence to
measure capital mobility during the classical gold standard,
inter-war gold standard, Bretton Woods period, and the recent float
(1973-present). Using a new macro database assembled from primary and
secondary sources, they examine purchasing power parity, the
correlation of saving and investment, covered interest parity, and
real interest rate convergence. They find that global capital market
integration has followed a U-shaped pattern since the outbreak of
World War I. Integration peaked during the classical gold standard
period, declined during the inter-war period, only to recover during
Bretton Woods. They note that market integration has increased
dramatically in the last twenty years. Obstfeld and Taylor conclude
that net flows of foreign capital are no larger today than they were
during the classical gold standard period.
In Part 3, the authors discuss the role of institutions in shaping
the evolution of international capital markets. They review the
history of international monetary arrangements and measure the degree
of monetary independence under fixed and floating exchange rates. In
accordance with the policy trilemma, they find that countries with
fixed exchange rates have had very little ability to conduct
independent monetary policy with open capital markets. Then they test
the effect of political and economic institutions on sovereign risk
during the classical and inter-war gold standards. They find that
being a member of the gold standard reduced the cost of capital
during the classical gold standard but not during the inter-war
period. Membership in the British Empire lowered sovereign risk in
the inter-war period, but not during the classical gold standard
period. Obstfeld and Taylor also find that countries with high public
debts were charged higher interest rates after World War I,
suggesting that policymakers lost the ability to conduct independent
policy. Their findings indicate that the inter-war gold standard was
less credible than the classical gold standard.
The authors conclude with a discussion of the policy lessons from
their historical examination of international capital markets. They
note that there are winners and losers from globalization and it is
very difficult to quantify the costs and benefits of open capital
markets. Financial liberalization, for example, is not (p. 299) "a
universal panacea" or "a risk never worth taking." Their main lesson
is that policymakers must take into account country-specific
institutions and economic conditions before giving policy advice,
especially to developing countries.
Although Obstfeld and Taylor provide a thorough empirical analysis of
international capital markets, some of their findings warrant
additional research. In their chapter comparing sovereign risk in the
classical and inter-war gold standards, they find that being a member
of the British Empire reduced the cost of capital in the interwar,
but not the classical gold standard. It is unclear why this would be
the case. Their results may simply be driven by a very small number
of British colonies in their sample. It would be interesting to
expand the coverage of their sample to further test for the existence
of an empire effect in both periods. Second, Obstfeld and Taylor
often use time averaged rather than point-in-time data to estimate
financial market integration in their analysis of deviations from
covered interest parity. A number of studies have shown that a
point-in-time analysis of covered interest arbitrage can yield very
different results (M.P. Taylor, 1987). Third, the authors discuss at
length the theoretical proposition that financial markets allow
investors to pool risks and smooth consumption. A long-run empirical
analysis of historical consumption data across countries and monetary
regimes might be a useful exercise to shed some additional insight
into this question. This type of study would probably be limited,
however, given the availability of historical data on aggregate
consumption.
Overall, _Global Capital Markets_ is an excellent study of the
evolution of international capital markets since the classical gold
standard period. This book is a must read for economists and economic
historians with an interest in international economics.
Marc D. Weidenmier is an Assistant Professor of Economics at
Claremont McKenna College and a Faculty Research Fellow at the NBER.
He has recently published the following papers: "Gunboats,
Reputation, and Sovereign Repayment: Lessons from the Southern
Confederacy," _Journal of International Economics_ (forthcoming),
"Real Shock, Monetary Aftershock: The San Francisco Earthquake and
the Panic of 1907" (co-authored with Kerry Odell), _Journal of
Economic History_ (forthcoming), and "Empire, Public Goods, and the
Roosevelt Corollary" (co-authored with Kris Mitchener), _Journal of
Economic History" (forthcoming).
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Published by EH.Net (December 2004). All EH.Net reviews are archived
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