Governor of India's Central Bank Raghuram Rajan on "Rethinking the Global Monetary System" #LSEIndia- An honor to host Gov. Rajan discussing the need for rules of the game. Make sure to read https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/new-monetary-policy-rules-needed-by-raghuram-rajan-2016-03?barrier=true … @RBIGov @SAsiaLSE #lseindia
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— LSE IGA (@LSEIGA)Tue, May 10 2016 10:02:56
New Rules for the Monetary GameRaghuram Rajan is Governor of the Reserve Bank of India. NEW DELHI - Our world is facing an increasingly dangerous situation. Both advanced and emerging economies need to grow in order to ease domestic political tensions. And yet few are.- .@ErikBerglof issue that developing economies haven't had enough say in design of global finance systems. @RBIGov is a key voice #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:14:11 - Dr Rajan adapts Tolstoy to explain economies: "Happy countries are all alike, but each unhappy country is unhappy in its own way!" #LSEIndia
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— Saanya Gulati (@BombayDelhiGirl)Tue, May 10 2016 09:18:55 - The world is more integrated than we thought. Talk of emerging markets decoupling after crisis, but it caught up with them too #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:19:12 //twitter.com/BombayDelhiGirl/status/729964461801492481
— Saanya Gulati (@BombayDelhiGirl)Tue, May 10 2016 09:21:04- Post-crisis emerging countries lose demand, need new sources of demand = borrowing & spending, much like developed did before #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:21:16 - "We don't really know what happens to saving and investment with an aging population" dr Raghuram Rajan #LSEIndia
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— The Homeless Poet (@rhymeandrevolt)Tue, May 10 2016 09:23:23 - Comments by @RBIGov remind of the brilliant book GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History, Diane Coyle discussed at @LSEpublicevents #lseindia
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— Elina Ribakova (@elinaribakova)Tue, May 10 2016 09:31:58 //twitter.com/SAsiaLSE/status/729967117181800448
— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:31:37- Stimulus and structual reforms are usual response to crisis, but can we do better? #LSEIndia
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— The Homeless Poet (@rhymeandrevolt)Tue, May 10 2016 09:32:21 - Are there structural reforms that could benefit from international coordination? A good example is efforts in tax avoidance #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:33:26 - Other areas where reforms could pay off globally? Perhaps the oligarchic industries - some moves in this area, but not coordinated #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:35:02 - "Have the reforms on bank regulations been adequate/effective?" Dr Rajam on the Qs we need to ask post financial crisis. #LSEIndia
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— Saanya Gulati (@BombayDelhiGirl)Tue, May 10 2016 09:36:18 - Pre crisis banks were over leveraged, but higher capitol requirements make banks stronger but markets weaker #LSEIndia
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— The Homeless Poet (@rhymeandrevolt)Tue, May 10 2016 09:39:58 - "Banks are backing off from riskier activities that would help global growth." - Dr Raghuram Rajan on the impact bank regulation. #LSEIndia
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— Saanya Gulati (@BombayDelhiGirl)Tue, May 10 2016 09:41:36 //twitter.com/jimcat1111/status/729969997183909888
— Jim ||*|| (@jimcat1111)Tue, May 10 2016 09:43:04//twitter.com/elinaribakova/status/729970248842121216
— Elina Ribakova (@elinaribakova)Tue, May 10 2016 09:44:04//twitter.com/SAsiaLSE/status/729972113319337984
— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:51:28- There are consequences for the rest of the world as a result of aggressive monetary policy - so have a thought for others #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:52:16 - Nowhere do the mandates of Central Banks say 'think about the rest of he world!' - Dr Rajan on monetary policy issues. #LSEIndia
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— Saanya Gulati (@BombayDelhiGirl)Tue, May 10 2016 09:54:28 - Talking about interest rate cuts & associated rise in savings. Wonder what #RaghuramRajan has to say about buzzfeed's 'urban poor' #LSEIndia
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— Gauri (@GauriChandra)Tue, May 10 2016 09:54:19 - Bottom line: don't know if we've reached the limits of domestic monetary policy but we know there are -ve unintended consequences #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 09:59:30 - Need to encourage policies that have a net benefit for global economy over time, while limiting or banning those which are -ve #LSEIndia
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— SouthAsia@LSE (@SAsiaLSE)Tue, May 10 2016 10:00:36
Rethinking the Global Monetary System.
Highlights from the LSE Institute of Global Affairs Public Lecture with Dr Raghuram Rajan (@RBIgov), Governor of the Reserve Bank of India and a leading voice of emerging economies demanding a more balanced global monetary system.
by
Julia Karmo59 Views