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- Title
Financial Markets and Economic Growth.
- Authors
Miller, Merton H.
- Abstract
In this reprinting of the Nobel Prize-winning financial economist's classic statement about the origins of financial crises, the Southeast Asian crisis of the late 1990s is attributed 'not to too much reliance on financial markets, but to too little.' Like the U.S. economy a century ago, the emerging Asian economies did not then-and do not now-have well-developed capital markets and remain heavily dependent on their banking systems to finance growth. But for all its benefits, banking is not only basically 19th-century technology, but disaster-prone technology. And in the summer of 1997, a banking-driven disaster struck in East Asia, just as it had struck so many times before in U.S. history. During the 20th century, the author argues, the U.S. economy reduced its dependence on banks by developing 'dispersed and decentralized' financial markets. In so doing, it increased the efficiency of the capital allocation process and reduced the economy's vulnerability to the credit crunches that have recurred throughout U.S. history. By contrast, Japan has not reduced its economy's dependence on banks, and its efforts to deal with its banking problems during the crisis of the late'90s served only to destabilize itself as well as its neighbors. Developing countries in Asia and elsewhere are urged not to follow the Japanese example, but to take measures aimed at developing financial markets and institutions that will either substitute for or, in some cases, complement bank products and services.
- Subjects
UNITED States; ECONOMIC development; BANKING industry; FINANCIAL crises; CAPITAL market
- Publication
Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 2012, Vol 24, Issue 1, p8
- ISSN
1936-8216
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1745-6622.2012.00360.x