CfP Deadline Date:
May 31, 2023
Conference Event:
October 6, 2023
Event Location:
Rome, Italy
Organizer(s):
Bank of England
Banque de France
Banca d’Italia
OECD
Description:
The workshop aims to address frontier issues in the area of international capital flows, discussing how capital flows are affected by cyclical factors, such as inflation-driven monetary policy normalization in advanced economies, by a more fragmented international financial system, by the growing role of non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs), and by long-run structural drivers, such as digitalisation and climate change. In addition, the workshop will seek to identify the appropriate mix of policy tools – including capital flow management measures (CFMs), macroprudential measures, monetary policy tools, and foreign exchange intervention – to mitigate the volatility of capital flows and the risks emanating from it.
The one-day workshop will bring together academics and policy makers to deepen our understanding of global capital flows. Health and travel conditions permitting, the workshop will be held at Banca d’Italia in Rome on 6 October 2023, otherwise it will be held in virtual format.
The event will feature a keynote speech and a high-level panel discussion that will address frontier issues on capital flows and key policy challenges.
The organising committee invites authors to submit empirical and theoretical papers on topics including, but not limited to:
• Monetary policy normalisation and increased debt burdens: implications for international capital flows.
• Effects of economic sanctions on international capital flows and exchange rates within a more fragmented international financial system.
• Linkages between terms of trade fluctuations – including from commodity price volatility – and capital flows.
• The role of NBFIs in the propagation of global shocks.
• Capital flows in a digital age: international spillovers of crypto activities and central bank digital currencies.
• The implications of climate change and transition risk on the direction and volatility of capital flows.
• The use of CFMs in the context of crises.
• Interactions of CFMs with other macroeconomic policies (i.e. macroprudential measures, FX interventions, monetary policy,) and/or with structural policies (such as policies aimed at reducing inequality and fostering market development).
• Distributional consequences of capital account liberalisation and potential implications for the design of liberalisation strategies.
Submission:
Interested authors should submit their paper by 31 May to capitalflowsworkshop@bancaditalia.it. Authors whose papers have been selected will be contacted by 30 June.
Link CfP & Conference:
4th International Capital Flows and Financial Policies Workshop