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Friday, September 29, 2017
SUNNY SIDE OF THE STREET: ANALYSIS OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM & THE ECONOMY (part 42)
The International Financial System (part A)
by
Charles Lamson
A Dramatic Metamorphosis
The international financial system consists of the numerous rules, customs, instruments, facilities, markets, and organizations that enable international payments to be made and funds to flow across borders. The international financial system has experienced tremendous growth. New financial systems have been created, and the volume of transactions has exploded. The dramatic metamorphosis of international financial markets is driven by technological changes, the growth in world trade, and the breakdown of barriers to financial capital flows.
From an economic standpoint, development in the international financial system has made financial markets more efficient because funds (financial capital) can more easily flow around the world to wherever they will earn the highest return. Over time, as resources are allocated more efficiently, both developed and developing countries should experience greater economic growth. As a result, living standards around the world should rise more than they otherwise would have.
The international financial system includes the international money and capital markets and the foreign exchange market. The international money market trades short-term claims with an original maturity of one year or less; the international capital market trades capital market instruments including stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and mortgages, with an original maturity greater than one year. Many new international financial products have been created to facilitate the increased financial flows. These include various typer of mutual funds that allow investors to invest in developed and emerging economies.
A crucial part of the international financial system is the foreign exchange market, where foreign currencies are bought and sold in the course of trading goods, services, and financial claims (securities) among countries. This global market is woven together by the dealers in foreign currencies---mostly, the foreign exchange department of the largest commercial banks located in the world's major financial centers such as New York, London, Frankfurt, and Tokyo.
In the post-World War II period, the international financial system has operated under two distinct exchange rate regimes. The specific exchange rate regime affects the trading of all international financial instruments. During the first regime from 1944 to 1973, major industrial countries maintained a system of fixed exchange rates, and currency values rarely changed. Under the second regime which has been in effect since 1973, exchange rates fluctuate daily in response to changes in supply and demand (market forces). Governments also intervene in the flexible exchange rate system.
To be continued in the next post, The International Financial System from 1944 to 1973...
*SOURCE: THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM & THE ECONOMY, 3RD ED., 2003, MAUREEN BURTON & RAY LOMBRA, PG. 462*
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