In this first era of globalization there was no IMF. There was little exchange rate variability (or at any rate far less than the world has seen recently). And financial market organization, as measured by the absence of corruption and of “crony capitalism,” was certainly no better than it is today. Capital flows then were as large as capital flows are now relative to the size of their economies. And these flows were accompanied by frequent international financial crises: in the case of the United States, about once every eight years.
Brookings Institution
Spring 1999