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Critical Issues in International Financial Reform by Albert Berry and Gustavo Indart (editors). New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2003.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1
Critical Issues in Financial Reform, with Special Reference to Latin America and the Canadian Experience
Albert Berry

Chapter 2
International Asymmetries and the Design of the International Financial System
José Antonio Ocampo

Chapter 3
Capital Flows to Latin America in the 1990s: An Overview
Martine Guerguil

Chapter 4
Competitiveness, Sustainability and Financial Market Failures
José María Fanelli

Chapter 5
Financial Liberalization in Canada: Historical, Institutional and Economic Perspectives
Donald J.S. Brean

Chapter 6
Linkages Between National Capital Markets: Does Globalization Expose Policy Gaps?
John F. Helliwell

Chapter 7
Firm Size and the Impacts of Financial Liberalization and Integration
Albert Berry and Clemente Ruiz

Chapter 8
Systemic Reform at a Standstill: A Flock of “Gs” in Search of Global Financial Stability
Roy Culpeper

Chapter 9
Enforcing the Rules in a Global Economy: The Emergence of Structural Conditionality in the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
Louis Pauly

Chapter 10
When Do Voters Matter more than Cronies in Developing Countries? The Politics of Bank Crisis Resolution
Sylvia Maxfield

Chapter 11
Financial Crisis, Income Distribution and the Labor Market: The Experience of Mexico and Asia
Diana Alarcón, Susan Horton, Dipak Mazumdar and Eduardo Zepeda

Chapter 12
The Chilean Experience with Capital Flows and Exchange-Rate Policy
Ricardo Ffrench-Davis

Chapter 13
Capital Flows and Foreign Exchange Regimes in the Colombian Economy
Leonardo Villar and Hernán Rincón