The Changing Environment of International Financial Markets: Issues and Analysis.
Li, Jane-yu Ho
This book contains papers presented at a conference under the
auspices of the International Trade and Finance Association in Laredo,
Texas, in April 1992. The conference was motivated by the need to take
stock of both theoretical and empirical work in the subject areas, after
decades of rapid changes in global financial market. These changes
include the emergence of financial markets in developing economies and
the changing political landscape after the dissolution of the Soviet
Union.
Papers included in this volume are of three basic types: analytical,
descriptive, and empirical. Subjects covered are broad and encompassing,
organized into seven parts: exchange rate markets, international
interest rates, balance of payments and international reserves, foreign
debt and country risk analysis, capital markets, and tax distortions and
international banking. A good introductory chapter links these areas.
Most papers include a literature review, methodology, analysis,
research findings and policy implications on risk management. Some
papers stretch to include general public policy recommendations. What
seem lacking are discussants' comments on the validity of research
findings or methodology. And, less technically trained readers will have
difficulties following discussion details.
General speaking, I found the papers in the capital markets section
rich in background content, especially the paper about risk management
and corporate governance in imperfect capital markets (by Klaus P.
Fischer, Edgar Ortiz and A. P. Palasvirta). In the absence of arm's
length financial markets, risk management leads to different strategies
- some are reflected in the reluctance to separate management control
from the ownership. Final outcomes of strategies often reflect
difference in market environment. Various aspects of less developed
financial markets are discussed at length. Several propositions are
developed as strategies. However, the discussion about public policy
implications to further develop the financial markets is rather weak. It
would be better to limit the discussion to market strategies and not to
venture into economic development strategies since that requires more
discussions of the institutional and cultural background. This flaw also
is shared by several other papers in this volume.
The capital market section also contains a paper testing
international capital market efficiency with a statistical analysis of
real rate of return, comparing mean-variance frontiers (by Shahriar
Khaksari and Neil Seitz). The paper concludes that international capital
markets are not fully integrated. Two other papers are about Korean
financial sector reform and the French quotation system of equity
markets.
The foreign debt and country risk analysis section is also
pragmatically useful. Ghosh presented a theoretical framework to explain
the persistent fall of the Mexican peso during 1976-82 and how that
triggered a real and fundamental disequilibrium. This paper also seems
to serve as the general background for the section. The next paper
presents a powerful analysis of foreign debt by introducing agency costs into the model. As long as some entrepreneurs are incompletely
collateralized, the analysis concluded that the optimum government
policy is to borrow the maximum possible amount internationally and
transfer the proceeds to the private sector. The paper about country
risk analysis introduces an analytic hierarchy process that can
systematically incorporate both qualitative and quantitative indicators
in rating credit worthiness. The last paper in this section deals with
political risk using the rational expectation approach.
This volume seems to have something to offer on all major aspects of
modern financial theories, i.e., market efficiency, portfolio theory,
and agency theory. The first paper in the exchange rate markets section
tested for market efficiency with London market data from 1988 to 1991.
Data were analyzed using Granger's co-integration technique and the
zero cointegration hypothesis was accepted as a result. This finding is
consistent to some earlier studies but contradicts others. Another paper
uses ARIMA model to examine the patterns of exchange rate fluctuations
with 1973-89 data. Using dally data, it concluded that market forces
overshadow Central Banks' interventions. However, weekly and
monthly data led to mixed results. No explanation is provided as to why
the data frequency should matter. Both papers are written for readers
who are familiar with the time-series methodology.
The international interest rates section contains two statistical
papers, one analyzes Eurocurrency and Treasury rates, the other compares
consumer discount rates across countries. The second paper also develops
a conceptual model to determine how to measure the consumer discount
rate. The third paper written by Ghosh presents various expressions of
interest rate parities that are quite useful for applied researchers or
risk managers. Some of these expressions allow market imperfections.
This paper draws on his two earlier papers on similar subjects published
elsewhere.
The balance of payments and international reserves section is weaker.
It includes a reasonably good analysis on demand for reserves for three
Central American countries (Costa Rica, El Salvador and Panama). But,
another paper presenting an analytical model to explain the U.S. current
account deficit phenomenon says little which is new. The third paper
about the balance of payment difficulties of former Soviet states and
Eastern European nations is a descriptive analysis.
The last section about tax distortions and international banking is
also weak. The background information and analysis about international
banking can he useful. I am somewhat puzzled by the paper about Mexican
municipal finance. I fall to see the connection between the different
institutions of countries and the limited benefits from NAFTA integration, a diagnosis by the paper. My understanding is that
countries with differences can better benefit from international trade
or integration, since there can be more opportunities to improve
efficiency and apply the principle of comparative advantage.
Jane-yu Ho Li U. S. General Accounting Office