Dance of the trillions : developing countries and global finance / David Lubin.
By: Lubin, David [author.].
Contributor(s): Brookings Institution [issuing body.].
Series: Insights: critical thinking on international affairs.Publisher: Washington, DC : London : Brookings Institution Press ; Chatham House, the Royal Institute of International Affairs, ©2018Description: 147 pages ; 23 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780815736745 (paperback ; alkaline paper).Subject(s): Finance -- Developing countries | Globalization -- Economic aspects -- Developing countries | International finance | Economic history | Finance | Globalization -- Economic aspects | International finance | Developing countries -- Economic conditions | Developing countriesGenre/Form: Print books.Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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On Shelf | HG195 .L83 2018 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU00000000013849 |
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HG187.4 .M34 2016 Intermediate Islamic finance / | HG187.4 .M64 2017 A socially responsible Islamic finance : character and the common good / | HG187.4 .R57 2012 Risk sharing in finance : the Islamic finance alternative / | HG195 .L83 2018 Dance of the trillions : developing countries and global finance / | HG220.A2 S93 2020 New money : how payment became social media / | HG221 .D63 2014 The social life of money / | HG221 .K2925 2020 The money plot : a history of currency's power to enchant, control, and manipulate / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 129-138) and index.
Introduction: What's past is prologue -- Enter finance: the 1970s -- Exit finance: two decades of crisis -- Explaining emerging markets -- Thank you, China! -- Toward a Beijing consensus.
"In Dance of the Trillions, David Lubin tells the story of what makes money flow from high-income countries to lower-income ones; what makes it flow out again; and how developing countries have sought protection against the volatility of international capital flows. The book traces an arc from the 1970s, when developing countries first gained access to international financial markets, to the present day. Underlying this story is a discussion of how the relationship between developing countries and global finance appears to be moving from one governed by the "Washington Consensus" to one more likely to be shaped by Beijing."--