International Capital Flows and the Corporate Governance Environment


Book Description

The relationship between the institutions of corporate governance and capital flows is complex. The majority of the literature however concentrates on the influence corporate governance has on investments. The reverse causality was so far mostly neglected, despite great relevance for investors, managers and policy makers. Christoph Nedopil focuses in this study on the topic what influence international investments have on the development of the corporate governance environment and answers this question both conceptually and empirically. For this purpose a quantifiable model for the corporate governance environment is developed, which is analyzed employing a novel dataset for the period between 1991 and 2005. The author can show that the corporate governance environment in developing countries improves under certain circumstances, especially if the corporate governance environment of the source country of the investment is higher developed. The findings of this study help both the academic debate on corporate governance as well as the economic and political discussion on whether and how foreign investors influence the evolution of various institutions.




International Capital Flow Pressures


Book Description

This paper presents a new measure of capital flow pressures in the form of a recast Exchange Market Pressure index. The measure captures pressures that materialize in actual international capital flows as well as pressures that result in exchange rate adjustments. The formulation is theory-based, relying on balance of payments equilibrium conditions and international asset portfolio considerations. Based on the modified exchange market pressure index, the paper also proposes the Global Risk Response Index, which reflects the country-specific sensitivity of capital flow pressures to measures of global risk aversion. For a large sample of countries over time, we demonstrate time variation in the effects of global risk on exchange market pressures, the evolving importance of the global factor across types of countries, and the changing risk-on or risk-off status of currencies.




OECD Sovereign Borrowing Outlook 2021


Book Description

This edition of the OECD Sovereign Borrowing Outlook reviews developments in response to the COVID-19 pandemic for government borrowing needs, funding conditions and funding strategies in the OECD area.




New Rules for Global Markets


Book Description

Which rules will shape globalization in the Twenty-first-century? This collection looks at the need for new rules and the divergence of national attitudes towards global economic governance. It covers the role of states in negotiating international trade, in regulating the banks and in promoting trilateralism. It investigates the role of business by assessing its increased power in writing the rules for self-regulation and in influencing the public sphere. Also, international organizations are analyzed as standard setters and regional institutions are examined as blueprints for global governance.




International Capital Markets


Book Description

These papers provide a cutting-edge overview of general issues regarding world capital markets, experience in developing countries, and capital market regulation, which many economists believe could turn into the number one topic in international business and economics.




OECD Principles of Corporate Governance


Book Description

These principles of corporate governance, endorsed by the OECD Council at Ministerial level in 1999, provide guidelines and standards to insure inclusion, accountability and abilit to attract capital.




The Role of Institutions on the Direction of International Capital Flows


Book Description

This paper studies the effect of different domestic institutions (property rights, corporate governance, and financial efficiency) on the net direction of different international capital flows (FDI and financial capital) in an empirical setting by taking the theoretical framework designed in Ju and Wei (2010) as a basis. Using a panel dataset for 123 countries covering the period 2006-2014 the results confirm the two-way direction of different international capital flows. The strength of property rights protection is found to have a statistically significant negative lagged effect on net FDI leading to a net outflow of FDI at relatively higher levels of property rights protection. Better corporate governance and financial efficiency is found to have a statistically significant positive effect on net financial capital leading to a net inflow of financial capital at relatively higher levels of financial system efficiency. The relationships holds for different specifications of the model although property rights becomes insignificant once the model has been corrected for potential autocorrelation and heteroskedasticity. Furthermore, there is potential reverse causality between institutions and capital flows that needs to be addressed using a proper time-variant instrument.




The Oxford Handbook of Corporate Law and Governance


Book Description

Corporate law and governance are at the forefront of regulatory activities worldwide, and subject to increasing public attention in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis. Comprehensively referencing the key debates, the Handbook provides a much-needed framework for understanding the aims and methods of legal research in the field.




The Financial Ecosystem


Book Description

Long term asset owners and managers, while seeking high risk-adjusted returns and efficiently allocating scarce financial capital to the highest value economic activities, have the essential and formidable role of ensuring the sustainability of return. But generally accepted financial accounting methods are ill-equipped to provide clear signals of the risks and opportunities created by scarce natural and human capital. Hence many investment managers in global financial markets, while performing due diligence on portfolio companies, examine metrics of non-financial performance, especially environmental, social and governance (ESG) indicators. Broken into three sections, this book outlines the rationale for and methods used in six areas where financial acumen has been harnessed to the goal of combining monetary return with long run sustainability. The first section offers an introduction to the role of finance in achieving sustainability, and includes an overview of the six areas—sustainable investing, impact investing, decentralized finance, conservation finance, and cleantech finance. The methods section of the book illustrates analytical tools and specialized data sources essential to those interested in increasing the level of social responsibility embedded in economic activity. The applications section describes and differentiates each of the six areas and their roles in advancing specific measures of sustainability.




Private Capital Flows and the Environment


Book Description

Describes patterns of private investment in Latin America and analyzes their impact on the environment, concluding that improved environmental performance can accompany foreign direct investment. Shows how governments of developing countries can attract foreign investors by integrating environmental considerations into their investment promotion efforts, and identifies points of leverage for actions by governments, investors, environmental groups, and customers to increase environmental benefits. Material grows out of a study launched at the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy in 1995. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR