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Spring semester - BA - IR - Year 2 Calendar view

20-21 Intl Financial System and Institutions BA


Class
Christophe de Landtsheer
Enrolment for this class is currently closed.

This module introduces students to the examination of international financial systems and institutions within the context of a globalised economy. It provides students with a review of the role played by these institutions, and their main channels of financial intermediation and regulation. Overall, the module encourages students to rethink macroeconomics and discuss possible ways of redesigning or recalibrating the system of international financial institutions.

This module introduces students to concepts and ideas concerning the role and oversight of financial institutions and systems. It consists of three main parts.

First, the question of why international financial institutions are needed. We shall explore the complications of the combination of commercial, political and humanitarian motives that have lead the development of today's international financial system.

In the second part the development of today's international financial system will be approached from an historical point of view. The course covers issues of the origins of financial instruments, institutions and governance; the gold standard; the global governance architecture set up after World War II as represented by the Bretton Woods and UN systems; this will include examination of some UN organisations (UNDP and UNCTAD), the G7, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB). Alongside this examination of macroeconomic (national-level) governance by global institutions, the module provides an introduction to the core elements of micro-economic (institutional and sector-level) governance structures overseeing financial institutions. This includes the Bank of International Settlements (BIS), the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The module also offers an examination of alternative and critical approaches to globalisation, as espoused by the South-South regionalism of such bodies as Mercosur and the BRICS. These various topics will provide the student with a sense of the logics and impacts of capitalist finance and financialisation and of the socio-political attempts at managing them.

The final part of the module addresses the challenges that the international financial system will be confronted to during the coming decade. The adoption of Central Banks Digital Currencies (CBDCs), the financial consequences of the COVID-crisis, the emergence of Decentralised Finance (DeFi), and the plans for a “Great Reset” laid out by the IMF and the WEF will be covered.

 

Please find more details about the course in the Module Study Guide: 2021_IFSI_BA_MIUC_MSG.pdf

Here is the class outline:

1. Week 1 - Introduction to the module

During the first week the structure of the course and the basic concepts of international financial organisation will be introduced. The history of the complex intertwinement of finance, trade, commerce and politics will be introduced using the example of the “Petrodollar”.

Week 1 - Introduction to the module
Some tricks for your research for your strategic brief
Overview of the United Nations Organisational Ecology
List of Major International Institutions
TIMELINE of the Financial System and Institutions
How is money created?

2. Week 2 - Domestic Financial Systems and Institutions

Until the XVth century economies were largely local. Over time these local financial systems have been gradually integrating into the current global financial system. In order to understand the current international system one needs to understand how domestic financial systems function.

Week 2 - Domestic Financial Systems and Institutions
IFSI readings week 2
Documentary about the interrelationship of finance and politics

3. Week 3 - Micro- and Macro-economic Drivers of the International Financial System

The development of the current international financial system has been driven by the need for multinational corporations to securely conduct business transnationally and the states' need to integrate international business into their economic policies. In this session we shall see how these micro- and macro-economic forces have shaped the current international financial system.

Week 3 - The Need for International Financial Institutions
IFSI reading 1 week 3: History of World Trade
IFSI reading 2 week 3: Institutional Law of International Organisations

4. Week 4 - The Global Context of the International Financial System

The international financial system does not function in a vacuum. We have seen that there exists a demand for international financial institutions emanating from countries, multinational firms and individuals. This week will cover the key political and economic challenges confronting the establishment and maintenance of international financial institutions: growth, stability, economic development, global public goods. Political and ethical issues are influencing its development. In this session we shall have a closer look at the institutional and macro-economic context in which the international financial system is operating.

Week 4 - The Global Context of the International Financial System
IFSI reading 1 week 4: Global Public Goods
IFSI reading 2 week 4: Anatomy of a Typical Crisis

5. Assessment 1 - In-class exercise 1

Assessment 1: In-Class Exercise 1
Assessment Criteria - Marking Grid

6. Week 5 - Banks, Money and International Payments

Just as the international financial system is an evolving concept, so is money. If we are to understand the current system and it's future challenges, we need to grasp the nature of it's underlying monetary regime and banking system.

Week 5 - Banks, Money and International Payments

7. Week 6 - The Gold Standard & Central Banking

Gold has historically had two main functions: as a means of international settlement and as a hedge against inflation. The Gold Standard has gradually been replaced by the current “fiat” money system supported by a network of central banks.

Week 6 - The Gold Standard & Central Banking
IFSI reading 1 week 6: The European Central Bank

8. Week 7 - From Versailles over Basel, Yalta to Bretton Woods

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) s the oldest international financial institution still functioning, yet the world leaders did not select this institution to organise the post-WWII international financial system. During this session we shall see why and explore the road that lead to the Bretton Woods conference.

WEEK 7 - From Versailles over Basel, Yalta to Bretton Woods

9. Assessment 2 - In-class exercise 2

Assessment 2: In-Class Exercise 2
Assessment Criteria - Marking Grid

10. Week 8 - The UN and the Bretton Woods Conference

At the end of the second world conflict the triumphant Allies considered the political and economic structure of the post-war world governance. This resulted in the establishment of the United Nation and of the “Bretton Woods institutions”.

Week 8 - The UN and the Bretton Woods Conference
IFSI Readings Week 8 (UN & UNCTAD)

11. Week 9 - The Governance of Global Trade

As trade and monetary policy are intimately linked the need to govern commercial transactions globally was initially embodied in the GATT. As the GATT gradually transformed into the WTO, this institution is currently in charge of policing protectionism and of arbitraging trade conflicts between nation states.

WEEK 9 - The Governance of Global Trade
IFSI readings week 9:

12. Week 10 - The World Bank Group

The WB's goal is the reduction of poverty through the the promotion of foreign investment and international trade and to the facilitation of capital investment.

Week 10 - The World Bank Group
IFSI Readings Week 10

13. Formative Assessment 1 - Outline of Strategic Briefing

Outline of Strategic Briefing

14. Week 11 - The International Monetary Fund

The IMF is arguably the most powerful and probably the most criticised of the three Bretton Woods institutions. It was principally founded to promote currency exchange stability and to make resources available to members experiencing balance-of-payments difficulties.

Week 11 - Crisis Management Assistance or Fiscal Discipline?: the International Monetary Fund
IFSI Readings Week 11

15. Assessment 3 - In-class exercise 3

Assessment 3: In-Class Exercise 3
Assessment Criteria - Marking Grid

16. Week 12 - The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)

The OECDs is what one could call an “international institutional think-thank”. It's goal is to shape policies that foster prosperity, equality, opportunity and well-being for all by providing knowledge and advice to inform better policies.

WEEK 12 - The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
IFSI Readings Week 12

17. Week 13 - Informal World Governance

The international financial system is also steered via less formalised processes. Leader use these informal platforms to discuss issues at the occasion of unofficial encounters which allows them to evaluate their respective stance on topics of international governance.

Week 13 - Informal World Governance

18. Week 14 - The Future of the International Financial System

2020 has been the year in which the long term consequences of 50 years of fiat monetarism, 40 years of globalisation of financial markets and of the 2008 financial crisis have become a threat to the the current international financial system. It has been the year in which the IMF has called for a “New Bretton Woods”, the WEF has formalised it's plans for a “Great Reset”, nearly all central banks have been working on CBDCs and, in which bitcoin has been vindicated. This session will consider the possible developments of the international financial system in the coming decade.

Week 14 – The "Great Reset" of International Finance

19. Final Assessment - Strategic briefing essay

Final Assessment - Strategic briefing essay
Strategic Briefing Essay
Assessment Criteria - Marking Grid