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by Richard C. Marston
In the past two decades, national financial markets in the major industrial countries have undergone a revolutionary change. Market pricing has replaced price-setting by government regulation or market conventions, and the removal of capital controls has opened national markets to international competition. Along with changes in markets has come improved understanding of how interest rates across different currencies are related. This study examines the progress in integrating the financial markets of the Group of Five (G-5) industrial countries: Britain, France, Germany, Japan and the United States. Professor Marston shows that deregulation and liberalization have succeeded to such an extent that interest rates in any single currency are nearly the same regardless of whether they are offered in national or Eurocurrency markets. Currency denomination remains a barrier to full financial integration, however, since both nominal and real returns on financial instruments vary widely by cur
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Phyllis Gotlieb
European Workshop on Learning Robots (8th 1999 Lausanne, Switzerland)