International Risk Management
No profit was ever made without taking some financial risk. However, economists such as John Eatwell and Lance Taylor have argued in their text Global Finance at Risk: The Case for International Regulation that international financial markets are intrinsically and particularly apt to pose the threat of risk to potential investors on an individual and a corporate level. Investors in finance base their decisions on guesses, not only about how other investors within a nation will behave, but also about national stability, which affects the stability of the currency. As markets have grown more global in scope, industrialized countries often have pursued a more cautious monetary policy regarding other nations. However, too much caution can be risky too, Ultimately hesitancy in investment results not only in lost opportunities, but a climate of fear that can at its extremes generates international deflation, a depression in economic growth, and unnecessary limiting of international growth and development. (Eatwell & Taylor, 2000)
Still, most international and national businesses prefer minimizing their potential exposure, to foreign exchange risks. Risk must be embarked upon, but judiciously. Unfortunately, as of late, the U.S. economy has become particularly vulnerable to charges of risk because of its current account deficit with other nations, the unwillingness of foreigners to buy U.S. securities based on the increasing national debt, which shows no sighs of abating, and also the perception that U.S. consumers as a whole lack confidence in their economy's growth potential. (Eatwell & Taylor, 2000) The U.S. dollar has been steadily weakening as a result. The United...
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