Aim of the course is to offer an updated framework of the
rapidly changing international financial markets with the specific purpose of
understanding and analysing the new strategic and management approaches of
banks and other financial intermediaries.
The course is structured in two main parts.
In the first part is a short introduction to some basic
concepts trough the presentation of cases taken from the history of
finance. The aim is to make the students
familiar to topics such as money, credit, banking and systemic risk considering
cases from the past, in which an evident relation between finance and real
economy or the magnitude of phenomena could make financial dynamics easier to
understand than in the higher-complex contemporary world.
In the second part, the goal is to provide the basic
economic and financial tools for understanding the historical moments that we
are living in and appreciating the debate that is rising around the working and
the future of the International Monetary and Financial System. Financial
markets are the expression of Globalisation and Internet is the medium through
which Globalisation reaches everyone
The textbook and the main part of the readings are available
on Internet, other material will be provided during the course.
Assessment organisation and a complete plan of lessons and
readings will be provided at the beginning of the course.
Part I - How it all began
a) Course synopsis
1. Money
This session provides an evolutionary perspective on the
monetary systems from the Ancient World to the Modern Age (XV-XVIIIth Century),
focusing on the characters and the differences between monetary standards based
on precious metals and the origin of paper money.
2. Bank
We will review the different functions of banking and some
of different forms the bank adopted during the past Centuries. Main focuses of
this section will be the evolution from currency changers to deposit bankers
during Middle Age, the origin of central bank (and its bonds with the finance
of the national states during Early Modern Age), the new need originated by
industrialisation and the national models of bank during XIXth Century.
3. Institutions
This section will present some of the historical answer that
the states implemented to cope with instability and systemic risk. We will
highlight the evolution of central banks' role until Late Modern Age, the
emergence of the international gold standard during the XIXth century and the
origin of international financial institutions (IMF, WB) after Bretton Woods'
conference (1944).
b) Materials
The main subjects are covered by:
- Karl Gunnar Persson, An Economic History of Europe.
Knowledge, Institution and Growth, 600 to the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2010), pp. 129- 153 (Chapter 7) and 171-184 (Chapter 9).
A complete list of assigned readings and web-based resources
will be provided at the beginning of the course.
Part II- International Finance
a) Course synopsis
1. International
Finance and the Global Crisis
This session highlights the importance of the topics of
International Finance in order to understand the World in which we live. The
Global Crisis of 2007-2009 was born in the financial sector and spread to the
entire economy because of the role that International financial institutions
and capital markets are playing in a more and more interconnected world.
2. Basic Concepts
in Balance of Payments, Capital Flows and Global Imbalances
We define the basic concept behind the balance of payments
accounts and how the interconnection between the current account and the
financial account is established. We discuss the twin-deficit identity and a
country's international investment position, using as an example the US-China
relationship.
3. An Introduction to Capital Markets and their Financial
Instruments
We will review the workings and methods of the capital
markets and their instruments. We will focus primarily on foreign exchange
markets, but we will review the most important derivatives contracts and
relevant markets for determining capital flows among countries
4. Models for Exchange Rates’ Determination: Interest Parity
and PPP
This session highlights the linkage between the exchange
rate, and interest rates through the interest rate parity condition. It is
shown how changes in economic variables can affect differential rates of
returns, which in turn can affect the value of the exchange rate. This session
presents the theory of purchasing power parity. The logic of the theory as an
explanation for exchange rate movements is provided. More importantly, the
supplemental readings help teach the way PPP exchange rates are used to make
international comparisons of economic data.
5. Monetary Policy, Interest Rates and Exchange Rates: the
Mundell-Fleming model
This session presents the basic model of interest rate
determination and then links it with the interest rate parity model for
exchange rate determination. This session introduces discusses long-run effects
of monetary policy and central bank interventions in a floating system.
6. Monetary Policy, Interest Rates and Exchange Rates:
policy with fixed and floating exchange rates
This session is the prosecution of the previous one. Fixed
exchange rate systems are then
introduced in the basic macroeconomic model.
7. International Financial Markets and Global Stability
This session looks at current financial developments and
focus on the issue of Global Stability. This session closes the course
and should give an understanding of the sources and nature of the risks that
international financial markets pose for the investors and the multinational
companies
b) References
Textbooks
· S. Suranovic, “International Finance Theory
and Policy”, http://internationalecon.com/downloads.php
c) Institutional websites
·
Bank for International Settlements
·
Financial Stability Forum
· IMF -- International Monetary Fund Home Page
·
ECB: European Central Bank home page