The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Alternatively, you can try to access the desired document yourself via your local library catalog.
If you have access problems, please contact us.
81 results
Sort by:
Financial crises are dramatic events. When they emerge, they tend to dominate the attention of the press and become the focus of policymakers. In one form or another, they have affected the lives of millions of people throughout the world. As references to 16th century Dutch tulips, 18th South Seas merchant ventures, or 1920s Florida real estate make clear, they have been around for a long time. At their worst, such as in the cases of the Great Depression or the current Great Recession, their effects have been felt worldwide, with the number of people affected counted int.
In: Serie macroeconomía del desarrollo 62
In: United Nations publication
This paper presents an analysis of the evolution of the competitiveness in the traded goods sectors in six Latin American countries. Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Results for Brazil are ambiguous.
In: Economica, Volume 75, Issue 297, p. 195-196
ISSN: 1468-0335
The macroeconomic experience of emerging and developing economies has tended to be quite different from that of industrial countries. Compared to industrial countries, emerging and developing economies have tended to be much more unstable, with more severe boom/bust cycles, episodes of high inflation and a variety of financial crises. This textbook describes how the standard macroeconomic models that are used in industrial countries can be modified to help understand this experience and how institutional and policy reforms in emerging and developing economies may affect their future macroeconomic performance. This second edition differs from the first in offering: extensive new material on themes such as fiscal institutions, inflation targeting, emergent market crises, and the Great Recession; numerous application boxes; end-of-chapter questions; references for each chapter; more diagrams, less taxonomy, and a more reader-friendly narrative; and enhanced integration of all parts of the work
In: Policy research working papers 1103
In: Debt and international finance
In: IMF paper on policy analysis and assessment 93/2
In: Journal of globalization and development, Volume 13, Issue 1, p. 149-186
ISSN: 1948-1837
AbstractThe 1997–98 Asian financial crisis marked a turning point in the IMF's previously negative views on the usefulness of capital account restrictions, culminating eventually in the publication of the Fund's new Institutional View (IV) on the topic in 2012. The IV acknowledged that full capital account liberalization may not always be appropriate, accepted that new restrictions could at times have a useful role to play even in countries that had previously liberalized, and spelled out a specific set of circumstances under which the deploying of new restrictions could be justified as temporary measures in response to large capital flows. This paper documents the important role that empirical research, both by the profession at large as well as by the Fund's own staff, played in supporting the first two components of the IV. It argues, however, that, empirical support is lacking with respect to the third component of the IV: the conditions under which the deployment of temporary capital account restrictions may be desirable. The conditions stipulated under the IV, which have the effect of considerably restricting the scope of circumstances in which the use of restrictions may be appropriate, are not fully justified by empirical evidence or recent experience and are best understood simply as a vestige of the institution's pre-IV hostility to the use of restrictions.
Recent research suggests that management of the public sector debt can have important effects on a country macroeconomic performance. This Public debt management and macroeconomic stability article provides an overview of the factors that the recent literature has identified as important in determining the optimal composition of the public debt. Based on this analysis, it attempts to establish general guidelines for public debt management in emerging economies. To retain market access and promote domestic financial market development, governments should generally finance themselves at market rates using a wide variety of securities. Beyond this general principle, the optimal composition of the public debt involves a tradeoff between enhancing the government anti-inflationary credibility and reducing the vulnerability of its budget to macroeconomic shocks. Consequently, the optimal composition of the debt depends on a country circumstances. Debt should be heavily weighted toward long-term nominal securities for governments that have anti-inflationary credibility and toward long-term indexed debt for those that do not.
BASE
In: Journal of development economics, Volume 71, Issue 2, p. 628-630
ISSN: 0304-3878
In: Journal of development economics, Volume 66, Issue 1, p. 337-341
ISSN: 0304-3878
In: Journal of development economics, Volume 49, Issue 2, p. 392-394
ISSN: 0304-3878
In: Journal of development economics, Volume 42, Issue 1, p. 205-208
ISSN: 0304-3878
In: IMF Working Paper, p. 1-30
SSRN