"For now it seems to me that the crisis likely has increased the gap between the G-7 (and G-10) countries and the rest of the world in a couple of key ways. Inside G-7 land, US banks could lend in euros (and European banks lend in dollars) secure that they had access to a lender of last resort – and the G-7 countries would still be in a position to offer hard currency loans to their “out-of-area” friends through the IMF. Outside G-7 land, countries would rely primarily on their own foreign currency reserves to cover the foreign currency liabilities of their banks – and potentially could use their own reserves to finance their crisis lending to other troubled countries.**
In some ways, that is a world where the gap between the G-7 countries and the rest would gets larger not smaller …"
It's fascinating. Here's my reply, which he didn't comment on or I'd tell you his answer, although he comes close in replying to a couple of other posts:
Don the libertarian Democrat Says:
“Smith’s colleague, Tu Packard, said that the problem is that in the hierarchy of lending risk, emerging markets countries fall at the bottom: “There’s only a limited amount of capital globally, and the big demand elsewhere is crowding out emerging markets.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/10/17/AR2008101702964_2.html?hpid=topnews
Here’s the oddity, following up on an earlier point. It seems the crisis began at the center, and yet the periphery is left out of the guarantees or opportunities you mention. What’s wrong with this picture?