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Official PDF , 24 pages
Official PDF , 24 pages

... the countres of Eastern Europe and the former SovietUnion facinga daunting dual challenge: to move toward competitive market economies while at the same time maintaining and strengthening newly gained democracies. The economic transition in these countries is viewed here as having three elements: ma ...
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... criteria. In terms of their effectiveness in increasing on consumer spending, the lower paid are likely to spend a higher proportion of any tax concessions than the rich — a crucial point in the argument between the Republicans and Democrats in Congress as to who should benefit from tax cuts. One me ...
How the Crisis Has Changed the Economic Policy Paradigm
How the Crisis Has Changed the Economic Policy Paradigm

... “In his paper for this session, John [Taylor] asserts that the BOJ’s quantitative easing strategy worked well, while fiscal policy was ineffective. My interpretation of the evidence is exactly the opposite. . . . [The BOJ’s] expansion of excess reserves to extraordinary levels appears , on its own, ...
An introduction to globalization
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How did the Foreign Debt Trigger the Argentine

... also created the conditions to attract investment back to the country, which in turn fostered productivity and economic growth. The growth rates enjoyed by Argentina’s economy between 1990 and 1998 had only been achieved throughout the first decade of the 20th century. On top of those positive resul ...
To leave the EU cleanly the UK must make sure that this path leads
To leave the EU cleanly the UK must make sure that this path leads

... Here we come into the area of ‘signal extraction’ where we (and everyone else) try to understand what (the ‘signal’) may be driving short term events (the ‘noise’). We know that in the very short term ideas about what is happening can drive asset prices sharply. Clearly the Brexit vote was a big sur ...
This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... of Economic Research
This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... of Economic Research

... seldom consisted of the complete elimination of QRs and major tariff reductions of the kind now recommended for the indebted countries. The Chilean episode with liberalization and stabilization between 1975 and 1983 illustrates very vividly one of the most serious trade-offs that emerges when a subs ...
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social cohesion - The Caribbean Council

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... transmitting destabilizing effects through their impact on exchange rates and asset, credit and commodity markets. The trigger for these flows is found in the continued monetary policy expansion in the US and other advanced economies, which involves injecting considerable sums of liquidity into the ...
Third World Network - the United Nations
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... transmitting destabilizing effects through their impact on exchange rates and asset, credit and commodity markets. The trigger for these flows is found in the continued monetary policy expansion in the US and other advanced economies, which involves injecting considerable sums of liquidity into the ...
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Implications of Structural Changes in the Global Economy for its

... more fundamental policy reforms would not be more effective. Even if it were agreed that countries should build up their foreign exchange reserves, one could ask whether they should also, or preferably, seek to reduce their short-term external financial obligations.6 Maybe there is a better way to a ...
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... Adopted by 11 EU members over 15. Traded at ...
PDF
PDF

... stress in advanced economies is transmitted to EM within the duration of one or two months. Despite its limited exposure to structural financial products and low level of financial integration, the rest of the world (all countries less advanced economies and EM) has also been cited to have been affe ...
This version: 20 March 2001
This version: 20 March 2001

... that monetary authorities should adopt a rule of money creation that was perfectly consistent with a preestablished expected economic growth goal. In general, this stabilization policy was contractionary and unemployment remained above an acceptable level. Thus, monetarism fell out of favour by the ...
Macroeconomics Theory - Future University in Egypt
Macroeconomics Theory - Future University in Egypt

... ‡Identify the underlying economic forces that drive economic growth and policy decisions. ‡Acquire sufficient knowledge of methods of macroeconomic analysis engaging in analysis using common economic arguments and policy decisions. ‡Recognize how to efficiently use available economic resources throu ...
The Effect of the World Financial Crisis on Developing Countries: An
The Effect of the World Financial Crisis on Developing Countries: An

... of their governments to engage in expansionary policies could be increased by expanding the resources of the World Bank and the IMF and loosening the conditions under which these institutions lend. ...
Statehood and Governance: Challenges in Latin America
Statehood and Governance: Challenges in Latin America

... of discovery, with structural benefits evolving only over longer periods. Yet, in quite a number of democracies of the subcontinent the positive character of democratic incrementalism has been substituted by political fragmentation, which hampers even gradual progress with regard to reform coherency ...
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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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