Abstract
This study explains some issues regarding the association between the dynamics of deregulation of financial sector relative to financial stability and commerce of Latin America, South East Asia and Europe for the period of (1971-2008). More precisely, we examine the impact of evolving within an "excrescence" of financial liberalization relative to commercial opening on the vulnerability of a country to currency crisis and link it to the argument of ample sequencing of liberalization reforms. The degree of correlation between financial liberalization and exchange crisis is analysed through dynamic panel data models using the GMM methodology. Our results suggest nonlinearity of the effect of financial liberalization on exchange pressures. Moreover, it is shown that the positive effect of financial integration on the speculative pressures appear once the rate of financial liberalization exceeds some threshold. While identifying the threshold effects it is found that synthesized structural changes in financial liberalization affect exchange market pressures. Our results also suggest that the impact of financial liberalization depend on the dynamics of integration of financial sector relative to the real sector. In fact, the "bad" dynamics of financial liberalization lead to an increase of a country’s vulnerability to exchange crises since the integration.

Aidi Wafa, Ayadi Mohamed. (2010) The Dynamics of International Liberalization Process and Financial Stability: A Revisit to Regional Experiences and Some Policy Guidelines, Journal of Business & Economics , Volume-02, Issue-1.
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