Program
"Management of Capital Inflows in Transition Economies 1 "
First workshop in the research program supported by the Ford Foundation
Date: May 18 - 19, 2001
Venue: the Marble Hall of Hotel Rubin,
Budapest, 1118 Dayka Gábor street 3.
Tel: (+36)-1-319-3231.May 18th, Friday
8.00 - 8.30: Arrival of conference guests and participants
8.30 - 11.00 First sessionPekka Sutela (Bank of Finland, Helsinki): Managing Capital Inflows in the Baltics: Experiences, Problems and Questions.
Zdenek Tuma - Tomas Holub (Czech National Bank, Prague): Managing Capital Inflows in the Czech Republic: Experiences, Problems and Questions.
Alexander Mantchev (CED, Sofia): Managing Capital Inflows in Bulgaria : Experiences, Problems and QuestionsDiscussion with moderator
11.00 - 11.30-Coffee break
11.30 - 13.30: Second session
Boris Vujcic (National Bank of Croatia, Zagreb): Managing Capital Inflows in Croatia: Experiences, Problems and Questions.Sergei Drobyshevsky (Institute of Transition, Moscow): Managing Capital Inflows in Russia: Experiences, Problems and Questions.
Discussion with moderator13.30 - 14.30 Lunch
14.45 - 17.00: Third session
Vladimir Lavrac (Institute of Economics, Ljubljana): Managing Capital Inflows in Slovenia: Experiences, Problems and Questions.
Gábor Oblath (Kopint Datorg, Budapest) - Gyula Barabás (National Bank of Hungary, Budapest): Managing Capital Inflows in Hungary: Experiences, Problems and Questions.
Discussion with moderatorMay 19th, 2001
9.00 - 12.30 : Fourth session
Daniel Daianu (CEROP, Bucharest): Managing Capital Inflows in Romania: Experiences, Problems and Questions.
Dariusz Rosati (National Bank of Poland, Poland): Managing Capital Inflows in Poland: Experiences, Problems and Questions.
Frantisek Hajnovic (National Bank of Slovakia, Bratislava): Managing Capital Inflows in Slovakia: Experiences, Problems and Questions.Discussion with moderator
13.00- 14.00: Lunch
14.00 - 17.30 : Fifth session
Claudia Buch - Ralph Heinrich (Institute of World Economics, Kiel): Capital inflows, financial vulnerability and currency crisis.
David Begg (Birkbeck College, London): Capital inflows, exchange rate regime, monetary policy.
17.30: Closing of the Conference