Lowy Institute for International Policy
Home
About the Lowy Institute
Publications
Programs
People
News & Events
Contact

Publications

Capital flows, the carry trade and 'sand in the wheels'

Dr Stephen Grenville AO


Summary
The 'carry trade', in which capital shifts from countries with low interest rates to countries with significantly higher rates, has become an important element of international capital flows over the past decade. In a new Lowy Institute Policy Brief, Dr Stephen Grenville looks at the challenges raised by these capital flows for economic policy.

The Global Financial Crisis will leave a legacy of substantial interest differentials between the slow-growing crisis countries and the emerging markets. This is likely to attract big short-term volatile capital flows which will push up exchange rates and leave these countries vulnerable to sudden outflows. Dr Grenville proposes that these countries should explore ways of discouraging these short-term inflows, and in doing this should have the backing of the IMF.


Download item (601KB PDF)

East Asia Program
Global Issues Program
International Economy Program
International Security Program
The Myer Foundation Melanesia Program
West Asia Program
Pacific Friends of the Global Fund
Wednesday Lowy Lunch Club
The Interpreter - Weblog of the Lowy Institute for International Policy
Peace with illusions
It would be dull to join the already large chorus of commentators predicting failure for the latest round of Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking, launched this week in Washington. Assuming that...Read more
Other recent postsOur consensus futureChina: Lessons from the Rudd eraObama: One war down, one to go
Available on the App Store
Video Library
Podcasting
RSS Feeds