2022
DOI: 10.1007/s12116-022-09361-0
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The Political Economy of Intermediate Capital Account Regimes: a Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis

Abstract: Contrary to expectations, the global push for liberalizing reforms during the 1980s and 1990s did not abolish policy diversity in regard to capital flow management. Even though many countries fully opened their capital accounts, there remain several examples of divergence, which go from the maintenance of high levels of capital controls to partial liberalization. Against this background, relying on data from 84 countries between 1995 and 2017, this article uses fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA… Show more

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“…Direct capital controls on inflows and outflows significantly reduce the inflow of debt and equity+FDI and the outflow of equity+FDI and derivatives. Da Silva and Pedro [16] interpreted capital flow policies from the perspective of political systems, proposing that right-leaning authoritarian regimes follow centralization while attempting to maintain control over the domestic private sector while integrating into the global market. Extreme closed or open capital account regimes depend on homogeneous conditions such as leftleaning authoritarian regimes and democratic regimes.…”
Section: /14mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Direct capital controls on inflows and outflows significantly reduce the inflow of debt and equity+FDI and the outflow of equity+FDI and derivatives. Da Silva and Pedro [16] interpreted capital flow policies from the perspective of political systems, proposing that right-leaning authoritarian regimes follow centralization while attempting to maintain control over the domestic private sector while integrating into the global market. Extreme closed or open capital account regimes depend on homogeneous conditions such as leftleaning authoritarian regimes and democratic regimes.…”
Section: /14mentioning
confidence: 99%