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Conclusion
By Andrew Sheng (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2008-11-17 10:21

Special Coverage

Conclusion

Exclusive: An Asian view of the global financial crisis

Contents:
Conclusion Preface
Conclusion 
A historical inflexion point
Conclusion 
The macro question
Conclusion The micro origins
Conclusion Lessons for China and Asia
Conclusion Back to basics
Conclusion 
One world, three paths
Conclusion Status quo
Conclusion The rise of regional markets
Conclusion 
Romance of the three regions
Conclusion 
Conclusion

Having studied financial crises almost all my life, I come to the conclusion that crisis is ultimately political in nature.

Even if it erupts as a financial crisis, its resolution would inevitably be political because the distribution of losses would be highly arbitrary and controversial.

Ultimately, all financial crises are crisis of governance. Financial crises prove that financial engineering cannot create perpetual prosperity. It takes good governance, at the corporate, financial and social level, to generate long-run sustainable stability. All crises have to be solved by governments, and if not satisfactorily, by the next government.

In one sense, I am hopeful. The present financial crisis has creatively destroyed many myths and out-dated theories. Free-market fundamentalism has truly been marked-to-market.

The author is chief advisor at the China Banking Regulatory Commission and former chairman of the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission.

 


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