Fine Tuning an Open Capital Account in a Developing Country: The Indonesian Experience. Asian Development Review, Vol. 29(2), pp. 136-180
Jayasuriya, Sisira; Leu, Shawn Chen-Yu | August 2012
Abstract
Indonesia has operated a liberal capital account permitting relatively free flow
of international non-FDI flows since the early 1970s. In this paper, we review
the Indonesian experience and the effectiveness of capital restrictions during
1990–2010 using a SVAR model of the Indonesian economy. Because of
severe data problems in the pre-1997 period and because the Indonesian
monetary policy and broader macroeconomic regime underwent fundamental
changes since the 1997 crisis, we also estimated a model separately for the
2000–2010 period. Both sets of results suggest that inflow and outflow
restrictions have been effective for FDI but largely ineffective for portfolio
capital. However, the 2000–2010 model results indicate not only that
restrictions on inflows have a short-term impact on restricting portfolio flows,
but also suggest that controls on inward portfolio investments have some
ability to shift funds from short-term to longer-term markets, though the
impact is short-lived.
Citation
Jayasuriya, Sisira; Leu, Shawn Chen-Yu. 2012. Fine Tuning an Open Capital Account in a Developing Country: The Indonesian Experience. Asian Development Review, Vol. 29(2), pp. 136-180. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1635. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.Citable URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1635Metadata
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