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How do macroeconomic and sectoral policies affect
How do macroeconomic and sectoral policies affect

... the result of the overall demand for goods and services in the marketplace. While most of this demand will be influenced by what and how much people are consuming in their households and enterprises, government policy plays an important role. For example, government infrastructure programmes or a po ...
REGIONAL INTEGRATION IN SOUTH AMERICA/INTEGRACIÓN
REGIONAL INTEGRATION IN SOUTH AMERICA/INTEGRACIÓN

... and adjusts to underpin the supply-side determined level of economic activity (which itself corresponds to the NAIRU).5 In terms of policy implications there is an important difference between the NCM, which adopts inflation targeting, and the ECB, which allegedly does not pursue strict inflation ta ...
Perhaps the most salient characteristic of growth performance in
Perhaps the most salient characteristic of growth performance in

... dramatic increase in capital inflows that exceeded expectations. In addition, whenever crises struck, their negative effect on growth was dramatic. This paper will provide some clues regarding the big swings in capital inflows. It will argue that although these swings are oftentimes triggered by ext ...
Experiences with Ex-ante Poverty Impact Assessments of
Experiences with Ex-ante Poverty Impact Assessments of

... Livelihood, Vulnerability and Coping Mechanisms • Institutions –role of government (politics) -modelling the private/informal sector further desegregation -households further desegregation • Models –combination of CGE and econometric models which would be combined with most widespread indicators use ...
The Role of Government in Economic Development
The Role of Government in Economic Development

... when all neoclassical postulates hold, adding additional constraints on markets will improve, rather than reduce, market efficiency. Finally, all the objections to the "trade is enough" theory also apply to the "evil government" theory of development. Rehabilitating Government: Several forces coales ...
95-98
95-98

... sector in general and specifically citrus and meat market. The results suggest that restrictive implement policies like increasing interest rate, and increase the value of the national currency reduces the strength and competitiveness in international markets. Therefore decrease the benefit of the m ...
Fiscal Policy for Growth and Development
Fiscal Policy for Growth and Development

... depend on the individual circumstances of each developing country. However, short-term stabilization should not be the only or primary lens through which developing countries assess the usefulness of fiscal policy. Its role in addressing key market failures, improving resource allocation and efficie ...
Understanding the Latin American Gap during the era of Import
Understanding the Latin American Gap during the era of Import

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The Relative Effectiveness of Monetary and Fiscal Policies

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Discretionary fiscal policies, automatic stabilisation and economic

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Fiscal Policy Responses to the Current Financial Crisis: Issues for
Fiscal Policy Responses to the Current Financial Crisis: Issues for

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PDF

... factor and commodity markets ("get prices right") to induce suitable movement of factors among sectors, encourage the adoption of appropriate technology, and increase capital accumulation. In this view, domestic and international liberalization programs would suffice to bring about sustained economi ...
National Asset-Liability Management Europe Symposium
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Macroeconomic Policy, Growth And Poverty Reduction Terry McKinley
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The EU-assistance policy for the post
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Neoliberalism and Regional Development in Latin America
Neoliberalism and Regional Development in Latin America

... companies will work more efficiently than those of the former public sector. Reforms to the labour market and the national institutional framework (such as property rights) are also seen as vital (Edwards, 1996). These are the core of the neoliberal reforms that are recommended by international inst ...
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The current international financial crisis: how much is new?

... financial crisis to hit the emerging market economies, affecting, as it has, Asia, Russia, South Africa, and Latin America.1 Second, it appears to be exerting a much ...
Latin American Exceptionalism
Latin American Exceptionalism

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MBA in Strategy and Procurement Management International
MBA in Strategy and Procurement Management International

... (especially international agencies during the 1990s and since) •But, a reaction: e.g., Dani Rodrik (Harvard) for ‘second-best’ institutions –’if you think best practice is the way to go in institutional reform, think again’. ...
DannyDorlingManchester_5_4_2011
DannyDorlingManchester_5_4_2011

... Conclusion: The near future really will be very different, because, for at least the last six human generations, the near future has changed radically with each single generation. Don’t despair that there won’t be change. Don’t assume it will be for the better, nor necessarily for the worse. The ve ...


... coordinate policies to manage the economic cycle and the designs to promote development in the longer term • Apply macroeconomic policies that curb vulnerabilities and take advantage of strengths, differentiated for specific situations (fiscal space, stabilizing mechanisms when facing external shock ...
That Glitters May Not Be Gold: Debating Key Issues
That Glitters May Not Be Gold: Debating Key Issues

... LAC-7 is the simple average of the seven major Latin American countries, namely Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela. These countries represent 91% of Latin America’s GDP. *Risky debt includes foreign-currency debt, short-term debt and variable interest rate debt. LAC-7 exc ...
Without Bread or Work in the New Millennium: Effects of Argentine
Without Bread or Work in the New Millennium: Effects of Argentine

... The Christmas season of December 2001 witnessed the spectacle of a cauldron of turmoil as panic and economic disaster swept across Argentina. The Plaza de Mayo, based in Buenos Aires, the nation’s capital, had borne witness to violence and protests in the past. Now, the Plaza was only one of many lo ...
EU-CELAC Business Summit eucelac
EU-CELAC Business Summit eucelac

... services to professional organizations and from support programs to development policies. Clustering has been widely developing in the last 10 to 15 years and the interface between SMEs and innovation is being sought for at local, national and European level. SMEs have a key role to play in enhancin ...
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Washington Consensus

The Washington Consensus is a set of 10 relatively specific economic policy prescriptions that is considered to constitute the ""standard"" reform package promoted for crisis-wracked developing countries by Washington, D.C.–based institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and the US Treasury Department. It was coined in 1989 by English economist John Williamson. The prescriptions encompassed policies in such areas as macroeconomic stabilization, economic opening with respect to both trade and investment, and the expansion of market forces within the domestic economy.Subsequent to Williamson's minting of the phrase, and despite his emphatic opposition, the term Washington Consensus has come to be used fairly widely in a second, broader sense, to refer to a more general orientation towards a strongly market-based approach (sometimes described as market fundamentalism or neoliberalism). In emphasizing the magnitude of the difference between the two alternative definitions, Williamson himself has argued (see ""Origins of Policy Agenda"" and ""Broad Sense"" below) that his ten original, narrowly defined prescriptions have largely acquired the status of ""motherhood and apple pie"" (i.e., are broadly taken for granted), whereas the subsequent broader definition, representing a form of neoliberal manifesto, ""never enjoyed a consensus [in Washington] or anywhere much else"" and can by now reasonably be said to be dead.Discussion of the Washington Consensus has long been contentious. Partly this reflects a lack of agreement over what is meant by the term, in face of the contrast between the broader and narrower definitions outlined above. But there are also substantive differences involved over the merits and consequences of the various policy prescriptions involved. Some of the critics discussed in this article take issue, for example, with the original Consensus's emphasis on the opening of developing countries to global markets, and/or with what they see as an excessive focus on strengthening the influence of domestic market forces, arguably at the expense of key functions of the state. For other commentators reviewed below, the point at issue is less what is included in the Consensus than what is missing, including such areas as institution-building and targeted efforts to improve opportunities for the weakest in society. Despite these areas of controversy, a great many writers and development institutions would by now accept the more general proposition that strategies need to be tailored to the specific circumstances of individual countries.
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