scholarly journals The Political Economy of Bilateral Bailouts

2020 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina J. Schneider ◽  
Jennifer L. Tobin

AbstractIMF loans during times of financial crisis often occur in conjunction with bilateral financial rescues. These bilateral bailouts are substantial in size and a central component of international cooperation during financial crises. We analyze the political economy of bilateral bailouts and study the trade-offs that potential creditor governments experience when other countries find themselves in financial distress. Creditor governments want to stabilize crisis countries by providing additional liquidity, particularly if the crisis country is economically or politically important to them, but they are constrained by domestic politics. Politicians aim to balance these countervailing pressures. They provide bailouts when their own economy is exposed to negative spillover effects and when the crisis country is important for geostrategic, military, or political reasons. Domestic economic and political constraints, on the other hand, limit their ability to bail out other countries. We test our hypotheses using an original data set on bilateral bailouts by the G7 countries to countries that experienced financial crises between 1975 and 2010. The findings of our statistical analysis support our theoretical argument and contribute to a deeper understanding of international cooperation's complex structure during financial crises.

Author(s):  
Louis W. Pauly

This chapter examines the political economy of global financial crises. The current world economy reflects an experiment involving the opening and integration of financial markets on the one hand, and the dispersion of political authority on the other hand, The resulting governance challenges are evident in the circumstances surrounding financial crises spilling ever more readily across national borders. In the late twentieth century, most such crises began in emerging-market countries. In 2008, however, the experiment almost failed catastrophically when policy mistakes in the United States combined with an economic downturn to spawn a global emergency. This chapter considers the changing political economy of systemic risk assessment, crisis prevention, and emergency management as the experiment continues. The timeline for the financial crisis of 2008 is presented.


2013 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 423-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kym Anderson ◽  
Gordon Rausser ◽  
Johan Swinnen

The agricultural and food sector is an ideal case for investigating the political economy of public policies. Many of the policy developments in this sector since the 1950s have been sudden and transformational, while others have been gradual but persistent. This article reviews and synthesizes the literature on trends and fluctuations in market distortions and the political-economy explanations that have been advanced. Based on a rich global data set covering a half-century of evidence on commodities, countries, and policy instruments, we identify hypotheses that have been explored in the literature on the extent of market distortions and the conditions under which reform may be feasible. (JEL F13, Q11, Q17, Q18)


2018 ◽  
pp. 004908571878613
Author(s):  
Keston K. Perry

This article criticizes the resource curse thesis for neglecting the interplay of international factors and domestic politics, the political settlement, in explaining the industrialization in Trinidad and Tobago industrial performance in a resource-dependent country. Using political settlement analysis secondary as well as interview data, it examines the dynamics at the macro and sectoral levels in iron and steel and telecommunications in Trinidad and Tobago. The historical evidence reveals that anti-colonial mobilizations spurred critical public investments in developmental institutions and industrial projects responsible for improving the country’s productive base and technological capability in the post- Black Power period. These investments were bolstered by bolstered by a favorable geopolitical climate and the 1973 commodity boom. Sectoral case studies reveal how shifts in the country’s political settlement affected late-industrializing accumulation of accumulation technological capabilities, yet neoliberal policies facilitated an increased role for external actors on economic policy and ethnic-based clientelism within the political economy.


1998 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 507-546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Torben Iversen ◽  
Anne Wren

This article presents an analysis of the postindustrial economy from a political economy perspective. It identifies a set of specific distributional trade-offs associated with the new role played by the services sector as the chief source of employment growth in advanced democracies over the last three decades. It is argued that three core policy objectives—budgetary restraint, wage equality, and expansion of employment—constitute a political “trilemma” that allows only two of the goals to be successfully pursued at the same time. Using a combination of statistical and caseoriented analysis, the authors demonstrate the political and economic salience of the trilemma, the distributional tensions inherent in each strategy to cope with it, and the political-institutional constraints under which these strategies are chosen.


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