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Books > Business & Economics > Economics > International economics > International finance
This volume is a testament to the breadth and policy relevance of
development economics today. It grapples with questions on how to
design anti-poverty policies and under what conditions we can
expect them to be successful. It concentrates on programmes and
policies for India and covers international experience with cash
transfer programmes. The work in this area applies core theoretical
insights to policy discussions surrounding poverty measurement,
income inequality, rural unemployment, and compares alternative
growth strategies in terms of their impact on poverty and
inequality. The book closes with chapters that trespass the
boundaries of economics and enter the territory of politics, to
engage urgent concerns of the day that are the basis of much
dispute and debate. The essays are collected under three broad
themes-anti-poverty policies; land, labour, and financial markets;
and political economy.
Conditions on the US-Mexico border are often so deplorable that
they seem "made for TV." Air and water pollution blighted northern
Mexican cities long before NAFTA was a glimmer on the political
horizon. Not surprisingly, when NAFTA became a political reality,
environmentalists reacted. They argued, among other things, that
commercial competition would weaken environmental standards in all
three countries, and that industrial growth in Mexico would further
damage its weak environmental infrastructure. The demands for
action against current and potential abuses posed a serious
obstacle to the completion of NAFTA negotiations. A side accord --
the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation (NAAEC)
-- helped alleviate some of these concerns. But in the aftermath of
NAFTA's economic success, poor living conditions persist in most of
Mexico. Many environmental groups blame NAFTA and, drawing on its
experience, now oppose new trade initiatives.
Does the NAFTA record on the environment since 1994 justify its
criticism? Seven years is too short to redress decades of
environmental abuse, but it is not too soon to assess NAFTA's
achievements and shortcomings in meeting its environmental
objectives. In this analysis, the authors review (1) the
environmental provisions of the NAFTA; (2) the NAAEC; (3) the
situation at the US-Mexican border; and (4) the trends in North
American environmental policy. They emphasize that the
environmental problems of North America were not the result of
NAFTA nor was the NAAEC devised to address all of them. But with
its huge success in expanding free trade, NAFTA has concentrated
population and environmental abuse at the US-Mexico border -- where
it ismost visible to Americans.
The authors offer recommendations to better NAFTA's
environmental dimension in all three countries, and improve living
conditions where economic growth is greatest -- at the US-Mexican
border. It makes more sense to tackle the shortcomings than to
lament NAFTA and the economic growth it promotes.
The international monetary system has changed radically in the
last twenty years. Capital, information, goods, and services move
around the globe with unprecedented ease. Countries from the former
communist bloc have joined the system. Europe is on the verge of
monetary union. Financial crises in East Asia and Mexico have
rocked the world economy. In this book, Robert Solomon--author of
the definitive history of the monetary order between 1945 and
1981--presents the first comprehensive history of these and other
aspects of this revolution in international finance. Authoritative,
accessible, and elegantly written, the book will be indispensable
for anyone who wishes to understand how today's international
monetary system works.
Solomon begins with the spectacular rise and subsequent decline
of the foreign exchange value of the U.S. dollar in the 1980s. He
covers the debt crisis of developing countries in the 1980s. He
explores the shift from central planning to market economies in
many countries in the 1990s and explains the origins, implications,
and problems of the move to a single European currency. Solomon
examines in detail the striking increase in the mobility of
capital--paying particular attention to the costs and benefits for
developing countries, and to the role of capital mobility in the
Mexican crisis of 1994 and the Asian crisis that began in 1997. In
the book's final chapter, Solomon provides an overview of the
international monetary system and considers how it might evolve in
the future. In this section, he focuses on the key subjects of
balance-of-payments adjustments, supply of reserves, and stability.
He also evaluates a variety of much-debated policy instruments,
including inflation targeting, currency boards, target zones for
exchange rates, free-floating exchange rates, the Tobin tax,
macroeconomic policy coordination, and special drawings rights.
Throughout, Solomon relates developments in the international
monetary system to macroeconomic conditions in the countries
involved--arguing that it is impossible to understand one without
understanding the other. As a clear, thorough, and unusually
perceptive account of global finance and monetary economics in the
late twentieth century, Money on the Move will be vital reading for
economists, policymakers, and general readers.
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