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From the CIAO Atlas Map of North America 

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CIAO DATE: 06/05

The Institutional Structure of Financial and Monetary Integration the Americas

Antonio Ortiz Mena and Susan Minushkin

October 2002

Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE)

Abstract

Globalization, understood as "an open market place free of institutional or locational constraints" (Weiss) seems to have taken hold of the Americas - for better or worse. There are currently numerous preferential trade agreements (PTAs) and bilateral investment treaties (BITs) in the region. Yet, how close is this image to reality? Do American countries have the institutional framework required to allow a relatively free flow of goods, services and capital within the region? This paper looks into the institutional structures required for financial and monetary integration, through an analysis of BITs, investment and trade in financial services provisions in PTAs, capital account regimes, exchange rate structures, and the possibilities for debt and equity financing within the Americas. It is an empirically-oriented paper that attempts to assess the degree of compatibility between the current institutional structure governing financial and monetary relations in the Americas, and the possibility of attaining relatively free flow of capital and integrated financial markets in the region.

Full Text (PDF, 71 pages, 3.33 MB)

 

 

 

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