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Unmasking the Pandemic's Pollution - How COVID-19 Negatively Affected the Environment
In: Cornell Policy Review, 2023
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The COVID-19 Pandemic and Food Security in Pakistan
In: Khan, Mohisn (2021). The Covid 19 Pandemic and Food Secuirty in Pakistan. MSR Working Paper Nr. 06-2021.
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An Ascertainment of Multi-Sectorial Programs for Trade and Aid between Pakistan and South Korea; Challenges, Opportunities and Way Forward
In: Journal of Asian Business Strategy, Band 5, Heft 11, S. 2015
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Working paper
Threshold effects in the relationship between inflation and growth
In: IMF working paper 00,110
The Design and Effects of Monetary Policy in Sub-Saharan African Countries
In: Peterson Institute for International Economics Working Paper No. 10-11
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Working paper
The Design and Conduct of Monetary Policy: Lessons for Pakistan (The Quaid-i-Azam Lecture)
In: The Pakistan development review: PDR, Band 48, Heft 4I, S. 337-356
Movements in global capital during the late 1990s and the
greater emphasis on price stability led many countries to abandon fixed
exchange rate regimes and to design institutions and monetary policies
to achieve credibility in the goal of lowering inflation. Such recent
developments have brought to the forefront the idea that freely mobile
capital, independent monetary policy, and fixed exchange rates form an
"impossible trinity". Inflation-targeting regimes being adopted by many
countries provide a way of resolving this dilemma, and it is suggested
that such a regime be implemented in Pakistan as well. JEL
classification: E42, E52 Keywords: Monetary Policy, Rules versus
Discretion, Inflation Targeting
Human Capital and Economic Growth in Pakistan (Distinguished Lecture)
In: The Pakistan development review: PDR, Band 44, Heft 4I, S. 455-478
Pakistan's economy has grown faster on average than many other
low- and middleincome countries over the past two decades. But several
countries in Southeast Asia have fared even better. This paper focuses
on factors that explain Pakistan's relative growth performance. In
addition to more traditional factors believed to determine growth, this
paper looks particularly at the role of differences in the quality of
human capital. The cross-country empirical results suggest that
accumulation of physical capital and improvements in the quality of
institutions have the largest pay-offs in terms of achieving higher
growth, but that better education and health care also have a
significant impact. Investment in these areas will increase the
possibility of Pakistan entering a virtuous cycle of high growth and
improved living conditions for the population.
Real Exchange Rates in Developing Countries: Are Balassa-Samuelson Effects Present?
In: IMF Working Paper No. 04/188
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Current Issues in the Design and Conduct of Monetary Policy
In: IMF Working Paper, S. 1-18
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New Issues in Bank Regulation (The Quaid-i-Azam Memorial Lecture)
In: The Pakistan development review: PDR, Band 41, Heft 4I, S. 333-356
Deregulation, technology, and financial innovation are
transforming banking. Indeed, banking is no longer the business it was
even a few decades ago. The way banking services are provided has
changed dramatically, and in many countries they are even offered by
institutions that are quite different from traditional banks. As the old
institutional demarcations become increasingly irrelevant, increased
competition from other intermediaries has led to a decline in
traditional banking in which banks took deposits and made loans that
stayed on their books to maturity. Banks thus have been moving rapidly
into new areas of business. In this evolving financial environment, the
international banking community and the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) are
currently wrestling with pinning down an appropriate regulatory
framework. The regulatory response to these changes has been a move away
from the increasingly ineffective command-and-control regulations to
greater reliance on assessing the internal risk-management systems, the
supervision of banks, and more effective market discipline. In the
language of the New Basel Accord, this represents a shift in emphasis
away from capital-adequacy rules toward supervision and market
discipline. This paper provides an overview of the profound and rapid
changes brought about by technology and deregulation, and discusses the
hurdles that will have to be negotiated for putting in place a suitable
regulatory framework. On the one hand, inadequate resolution of these
challenges will create the wrong incentives and lead to banking
fragility. On the other hand, overregulation carries the danger that it
will retard the development of national financial systems, hinder the
best use of available domestic savings, prevent countries from accessing
international capital, and ultimately lead to slower growth. Developed
financial systems are being challenged by the shift in regulatory focus,
and the definition and implementation of appropriate regulatory
standards is encountering substantial difficulties. Finding the right
balance between regulation, supervision, and reliance on market
discipline is likely to be even more difficult in developing and
transition countries.
IMF Conditionality and Country Ownership of Programs
In: IMF Working Paper No. 2001/142
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Capital Flows to Developing Countries: Blessing or Curse? (Distinguished Lecture)
In: The Pakistan development review: PDR, Band 37, Heft 4I, S. 125-151
The surge of private capital flows to developing countries
that occurred in the 1990s has been the most significant phenomenon of
the decade for these countries. By the middle of the decade many
developing countries in Asia and Latin America were awash with private
foreign capital. In contrast to earlier periods when the scarcity of
foreign capital dominated economic policy-making in these countries, the
issue now for governments was how to manage the largescale capital
inflows to generate higher rates ofinvestrnent and growth. While a
number of developing countries were able to benefit substantially from
the private foreign financing that globalisation made available to them,
it also became apparent that capital inflows were not a complete
blessing and could even turn out to be a curse. Indeed, in some
countries capital inflows led to rapid monetary expansion, inflationary
pressures, real exchange rate appreciation, fmancial sector
difficulties, widening current account deficits, and a rapid build-up of
foreign debt. In addition, as the experience of Mexico in 1994 and the
Asian crisis of 1997-98 demonstrated, financial integration and
globalisation can cut both ways. Private capital flows are volatile and
eventually there can be a large reversal of capital because of changes
in expected asset returns, investor herding behaviour, and contagion
effects. Such reversals can lead to recessions and serious problems for
financial systems. This paper examines the characteristics, causes and
consequences of capital flows to developing countries in the 1990s. It
also highlights the appropriate policy responses for governments facing
such inflows, specifically to prevent overheating of the economy, and to
limit the vulnerability to reversals of capital flows.
النظام المصرفي الإسلامي الخالي من الفائدة : تحليل نظري (Islamic Interest-Free Banking: A Theoretical Analysis)
In: Journal of King Abdulaziz University: Islamic Economics, Band 9, Heft 1
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