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©2000 International Monetary Fund

January 2000

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This advance copy of Country Experiences with the Use and Liberalization of Capital Controls is provided for the convenience of the public. Some material contained herein may be amended in the course of publication. The published version, which is expected to be available in March 2000, will be the document of record.



ADVANCE COPY
Country Experiences with the Use and Liberalization of Capital Controls
Akira Ariyoshi, Karl Habermeier,Bernard Laurens, Inci Otker-Robe, Jorge Iván Canales-Kriljenko, and Andrei Kirilenko

Contents

Part I
File 1
149k pdf file 
  1. Introduction
  2. Country Experiences
  3. Prudential Framework for Managing Risk in Cross-Border Capital Flows
  4. Conclusions
 Figures
File 2
3,493k pdf file
  1. Countries with Controls on Short-Term Capital Inflows
File 3
1,799k pdf file
  1. Countries with Selective Controls on Outflows and with Extensive Controls
 
Part II
File 4
161k pdf file
Background Studies
Country Experience with Capital Controls under Different Circumstances
  1. Expereince with the Use of Capital Controls to Limit Short-Term Capital Inflows
  2. Experience with the Use of Capital Outflow Controls in the Context of Financial Crises
  3. Experience with the Use of Extensive Controls During Financial Crises
  4. Experience with Long-Standing and Extensive Capital Controls and Their Liberalization
  5. Experience with Rapid Liberalization
 
File 5
723k pdf file
Background Studies
Detailed Case Studies
  1. Chile—Experience with Controls on Capital Inflows in the 1990s
  2. Experience with the Use of Capital Outflow Controls in the Context of Financial Crises
  3. Experience with the Use of Extensive Controls During Financial Crises
  4. Experience with Long-Standing and Extensive Capital Controls and Their Liberalization
  5. Experience with Rapid Liberalization
 Figures
  1. Countries with Controls on Short-Term Capital Inflows
  1. Countries with Selective Controls on Outflows and with Extensive Controls


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