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WP24
WP24

... flows and on exchange rate movements in the face of different macroeconomic conditions in different countries. For Keynes, nothing was more damaging of national economic performance than the free movement of speculative capital; and he considered it a major triumph that the plan for the IMF “accords ...
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what kind of development should be financed?

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This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... of Economic Research Volume Title: International Economic Cooperation
This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... of Economic Research Volume Title: International Economic Cooperation

... government borrowing absorbed more than half of all U.S. domestic saving, was it better to attract capital from the rest of the world to maintain the relative level of investment in the United States or would it have been better to permit a sharp fall in U. S. domestic investment? Was it better to s ...
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The New Left in Latin America and the Opportunity for a New U.S.

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The relative merits of demand-side and supply

... training improves workers’ human capital. They become better quality workers. Their productivity improves and so the LRAS curve shifts to the right. Economies that have invested heavily in education are those that are well set for the future. Most economists agree, with the move away from industries ...
The syndrome of disproportion in Argentine foreign policy
The syndrome of disproportion in Argentine foreign policy

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Diapositiva 1 - University of Verona
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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

... Part 2 concentrates on some aspects of the political economy of reform, including the distributive consequences of macroeconomic policies. In chapter 3 Cardenas and Urmtia argue that macroeconomic stability is necessary for sustained social progress. They use cross-section analysis to investigate wh ...
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John Murray: With a little help from your friends
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... symbolized by the fall of Lehman Brothers, which brought with it panic in the banking sector, credit contraction and financial instability. The financial crisis, and its rapid impact on the real economy, generated a significant shrinkage of world economic activity in 2008. In the majority of develop ...
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DERFOR KOM FINANSKRISEN OG HVAD GØR VI VED DEN?

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economic liberalization in latin america under the historical lens

... international financial markets and an abrupt change in conditions and rules for international lending. The non-linear interactions between this unusual and persistent external shock and risky or faulty domestic policies led to a crisis of severe depth and length, one that neither shocks nor bad pol ...
Microeconomic Reforms, Macroeconomic Impacts
Microeconomic Reforms, Macroeconomic Impacts

... Independent Evaluation Group, The World Bank, various sectoral and country reports The World Bank Group, World Development Report, several issues Williamson, John (2002). “Did the Washington Consensus Fail?” Outline of Remarks at CSIS. Washington DC: Institute for International Economics, November 6 ...
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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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