ABSTRACT

In States, Banks, and Markets Nancy Neiman Auerbach approaches financial policymaking as a strategic interaction between two sets of domestic actors: private financiers and state officials. Through a comparative lens, Auerbach explains why the transition to financial liberalization was accompanied by economic crisis and declining growth rates in countries such as Mexico, while the same policy was associated with higher growth rates and a relatively more equitable distribution of income in other countries such as South Korea and Hong Kong.Auerbach first sets up a theoretical foundation that underlies the comparative case studies, and she then follows with a detailed account of Mexico's transition to financial liberalization in the 1980s. The author systematically compares various countries' cases--Germany, South Korea, Hong Kong, Turkey--with Mexico as a means of underscoring the central and recurring themes illustrated by financial market politics in newly industrializing countries. The author then returns to her analysis of Mexico with an examination of the Mexican peso crisis in light of the recent financial crises in Asia. Auerbach not only demonstrates how the timing and duration of the liberalization process is the element differentiating the performance of newly industrializing countries (rather than financial liberalization itself), for she takes the analysis a step further by explaining the economic and political preconditions that put a country in the position to choose a reasonable reform path.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|24 pages

The Rise of Banker's Hegemony

Financial Policymaking and Economic Performance in Mexico

chapter 2|24 pages

Promoting Growth or Encouraging Speculation?

Bank-Led Finance and Financial Policy in Germany and Mexico

chapter 3|25 pages

Policy Choice or State Autonomy?

Financial Liberalization In Mexico and South Korea

chapter 4|38 pages

The Efficiency of Leadership and the Leadership of Efficiency

The Politics of Finance in Turkey, South Korea, Hong Kong, and Mexico

chapter 5|20 pages

From Bank-led Finance to Market-led Crisis

Reflections on the Mexican Peso and the South Korean Financial Crises

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion