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・ Financial incentives for photovoltaics
・ Financial inclusion
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・ Financial infidelity
・ Financial Information Authority (Vatican City)
・ Financial Information eXchange
・ Financial innovation
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・ Financial institutions duty
・ Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989
・ Financial Institutions Regulatory and Interest Rate Control Act of 1978
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Financial integration
・ Financial intelligence
・ Financial Intelligence & Processing
・ Financial intelligence (business)
・ Financial Interest and Syndication Rules
・ Financial intermediary
・ Financial irregularities during the Manuel Zelaya administration
・ Financial literacy
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Financial integration : ウィキペディア英語版
Financial integration
Financial integration is a phenomenon in which financial markets in neighboring, regional and/or global economies are closely linked together. Various forms of actual financial integration include: Information sharing among financial institutions; sharing of best practices among financial institutions; sharing of cutting edge technologies (through licensing) among financial institutions; firms borrow and raise funds directly in the international capital markets; investors directly invest in the international capital markets; newly engineered financial products are domestically innovated and originated then sold and bought in the international capital markets; rapid adaption/copycat of newly engineered financial products among financial institutions in different economies; cross-border capital flows; and foreign participation in the domestic financial markets.
Because of financial market imperfections, financial integration in neighboring, regional and/or global economies is therefore imperfect. For example, the imperfect financial integration can stem from the inequality of the marginal rate of substitutions of different agents. In addition to financial market imperfections, legal restrictions can also hinder financial integration. Therefore, financial integration can also be achieved from the elimination of restrictions pertaining to cross-border financial operations to allow (a) financial institutions to operate freely, (b) permit businesses to directly raise funds or borrow and (c) equity and bond investors to invest across the state line with fewer (without imposing any ) restrictions.〔
However, it is important to note that many of the legal restrictions exist because of the market imperfections that hinder financial integration. Legal restrictions are sometimes second-best devices for dealing with the market imperfections that limit financial integration. Consequently, removing the legal restrictions can make the world economy become worse off.
In addition, financial integration of neighboring, regional and/or global economies can take place through a formal international treaty which the governing bodies of these economies agree to cooperate to address regional and/or global financial disturbances through regulatory and policy responses.〔(【引用サイトリンク】first=N.W. )
The extent to which financial integration is measured includes gross capital flows, stocks of foreign assets and liabilities, degree of co-movement of stock returns, degree of dispersion of world-wide real interest rates, and financial openness.〔
==History==
Financial integration is believed to date back to the 1690s and was briefly interrupted at the start of the French revolution
(Neal, 1990). At the end of the 17th century, the world’s dominant commercial empire was the Dutch Republic with the most important financial center located in Amsterdam where Banking, foreign exchange trading, stock trading and bullion trading were situated. And it was Amsterdam where Dutch investors directed funds abroad at the time. The Amsterdam Exchange had positioned itself as a world marketplace where many different types of securities and commodities were exchanged. It was also in this period that London and Amsterdam were closely integrated financially (Eagly and Smith, 1976; Neal, 1990〔); Amsterdam assumed the role as the senior partner in acting as the stabilizing force for London during times of English financial crisis.
However, it was in the Classical Gold Standard Era (the period from the mid-1870s until the start of World War I) that financial integration began to take shape in Europe. In these periods, for examples, the securities and foreign exchange markets were closely linked; stock and bond markets were internationally linked; international arbitrage activities were no strangers; and commercial and investment banks in major economies established a linkage (Jackson and Lothian, 1993; Lothian, 2000.〔
Eventually the 1980s and 1990s saw a significant increase in financial integration (Lothian, 2000〔). For example, facing a sharp increase in real exchange rate volatility and the increased risk in these years, institutions surrounding international finance worked together to address these challenges. Regulatory restrictions on international capital mobility such as capital control, interest rate ceilings, etc. were weakened and removed because such regulatory framework was costly in the new market environment. To contain the adverse effects of exchange-rate volatility, new financial instruments and markets were developed.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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