Playing Monopoly with the Devil: Dollarization and Domestic Currencies in Developing Countries
Playing Monopoly with the Devil: Dollarization and Domestic Currencies in Developing Countries
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Abstract
Why should a developing country surrender its power to create money by adopting an international currency as its own? This book explores the currency problems that developing countries face and offers sound, practical advice for policy makers on how to deal with them. The author, who has extensive experience in real-world economic policy making, challenges the myths that surround domestic currencies, and shows the clear rationality for dollarization or the use of a standard international currency. The book opens with a story of the Devil, who, through a series of common macroeconomic maneuvers, coaches the president of a mythical country into financial ruin. This ruler's path is not unlike that taken in several real developing countries, to their detriment. The book introduces new ways of thinking about financial systems and monetary behavior in Third World countries.
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Front Matter
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Part One The Unfulfilled Promises of Local Currencies
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Part Two The Reversed Liquidity Trap and Financial Crises
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Part Three The Optimal Currency Area and the Choice of Currency
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End Matter
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