Eco Dev
Eco Dev
Eco Dev
Chapter 4
1. The Asian financial crisis was a surprise to most economists, even those
that specialized on economic developments in the region. Why do you
think this happened?
Answer: The Asian financial crisis was a period of financial crisis that gripped
much of East Asia and Southeast Asia beginning in July 1997 and raised fears of a
worldwide economic meltdown due to financial contagion. It is also called “Asian
Contagion” a sequence of currency devaluations and other events that began in the
summer of 1997 and spread through many Asian markets. The currency markets first
failed in Thailand as the result of the government's decision to no longer peg the local
currency to the U.S. dollar (USD). Currency declines spread rapidly throughout East
Asia, in turn causing stock market declines, reduced import revenues, and government
upheaval.
I think this was happened because the Asian financial crisis was trailed
somewhat due to financial intervention from the International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank. The Asian crisis led to some much-needed financial and government
reforms in countries such as Thailand, South Korea, Japan, and Indonesia.
CAUSES
Sources:https://www.google.com/search?
q=asian+financial+crisis&oq=asian&aqs=chrome.0.69i59j69i57j0l4j69i60l2.4418j0j
7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
2. Explain how the institutional and cultural setting of financial institution in
Asia contributed to the crisis.
Answer: Asian financial crisis generally have neglected the influence of cultural
factors and instead have focused on macroeconomic variables. It argues that East
Asian cultural values served as the social foundation that generated these critical
factors. The inventories the different policy recommendations proposed by the
international bodies and comments on the extent to which the cultural, institutional, and
organizational requirements embedded in these recommendations conform to the
dominant cultural, institutional, and organizational characteristics of the countries in
crisis. Asian Financial Crisis has drawn different intellectual responses as to its causes.
3. How did SARS and the Iraqi war affect the Asian region? Were these
impacts similar to those of the Asian crisis? How were they different?
Answer: SARS has severely disturbed the economics of other countries in the
Asia, and expected to reduce GDP growth in East Asia. This has happened in an
environment of an already quiet global economy. SARS has caused a large demand
shock in East Asia, particularly to the consumption of services, especially travel.
However, excepting further outbreaks, the economic disturbance should be relatively
short-lived, with the worst of the economic impact expected in the June quarter 2003. It
also affected by having high oil prices, the stalling in technology exports, and overall
weak economic growth in major industrialized economies. GDP growth slowed
significantly in a number of East Asian economies.
For me, its impacts is similar to those of the Asian crisis, because it all has
effects in the economic growth in every country in the Asia, it also lessen the income of
every people in a country because of the outbreak, also experience negative economic
impacts due to weaker tourism and spillover from slower economic activity.
Sources: https://www.hindawi.com/journals/jeph/2018/2710185/
Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_reserves
Sources:https://www2.gwu.edu/~ibi/minerva/Fall1998/Sylvana.Souza/Sylva
na.Souza.html