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This volume contains country experiences explained by policy makers and studies by leading experts on causes and consequences of capital flows as well as policies to control these flows. It addresses portfolio flow issues central to open economies, especially emerging markets.
This volume provides a pluralistic discussion from world-renowned scholars on the international aspects of the debt crisis and prospects for resolution. It provides a comprehensive evaluation of how the debt crisis has impacted Western Europe, the emerging markets and Latin America, and puts forward different suggestions for recovery.
In this volume, world-renowned economists and policymakers write about industrial policy, which is being recognized anew as a linchpin for the economics of development. They show that developing countries that have undertaken a wide variety of industrial policies have been the most successful. In focusing on Africa, which has a potentially great producer and consumer base for industry, they have chosen a continent that provides an especially clear example of why this refreshed emphasis on industrial policy is so important.
As an income contingent loans bill is considered by the US
Congress, income contingent loans (ICL) have risen to the forefront
of economic discourse. ICLs are collected through the income
taxation system and are repaid only when future incomes exceed a
specified level. ICLs were first introduced in Australia in 1989 to
help college students finance their tuition costs, and since then
many countries have followed this policy approach. Bruce Chapman,
Timothy Higgins and Joseph E. Stiglitz along with a host of
internationally recognised experts who have been instrumental in
impacting national policy in this field, explore the theory of
ICLs, and the prospect of applying the basic principles to many
other potential areas of social and economic policy such as paid
parental leave; recompensing poor countries for skilled migrant
emigration; legal aid for civil disputes; business innovation for
small and medium enterprises; out-of-pocket health care expenditure
needs; and for periods of unemployment.
In the wake of the global financial crisis, there is a new impetus
for industrial policy. In Europe and the United States, where the
crisis emphasized that markets are by themselves imperfect,
industrial policy has re-entered the dialogue about restoring
growth. And in emerging economies especially, policymakers have
taken a keen interest in the various ways smart industrial policy
can help sustain growth and open up new possibilities for
employment creation. In this volume, world-renowned economists and
policymakers write about industrial policy's rejuvenation,
particularly in a development context. Through discussions of
theory and case studies, the volume provides the broad context for
its companion, New Thinking on Industrial Policy: Implications for
Africa.
This volume contains country experiences explained by policy makers and studies by leading experts on causes and consequences of capital flows as well as policies to control these flows. It addresses portfolio flow issues central to open economies, especially emerging markets.
This volume provides a pluralistic discussion from world-renowned scholars on the international aspects of the debt crisis and prospects for resolution. It provides a comprehensive evaluation of how the debt crisis has impacted Western Europe, the emerging markets and Latin America, and puts forward different suggestions for recovery.
As an income contingent loans bill is considered by the US
Congress, income contingent loans (ICL) have risen to the forefront
of economic discourse. ICLs are collected through the income
taxation system and are repaid only when future incomes exceed a
specified level. ICLs were first introduced in Australia in 1989 to
help college students finance their tuition costs, and since then
many countries have followed this policy approach. Bruce Chapman,
Timothy Higgins and Joseph E. Stiglitz along with a host of
internationally recognised experts who have been instrumental in
impacting national policy in this field, explore the theory of
ICLs, and the prospect of applying the basic principles to many
other potential areas of social and economic policy such as paid
parental leave; recompensing poor countries for skilled migrant
emigration; legal aid for civil disputes; business innovation for
small and medium enterprises; out-of-pocket health care expenditure
needs; and for periods of unemployment.
In this volume, world-renowned economists and policymakers write about industrial policy, which is being recognized anew as a linchpin for the economics of development. They show that developing countries that have undertaken a wide variety of industrial policies have been the most successful. In focusing on Africa, which has a potentially great producer and consumer base for industry, they have chosen a continent that provides an especially clear example of why this refreshed emphasis on industrial policy is so important.
In the wake of the global financial crisis, there is a new impetus for industrial policy. In Europe and the United States, where the crisis emphasized that markets are by themselves imperfect, industrial policy has re-entered the dialogue about restoring growth. And in emerging economies especially, policymakers have taken a keen interest in the various ways smart industrial policy can help sustain growth and open up new possibilities for employment creation. In this volume, world-renowned economists and policymakers write about industrial policy's rejuvenation, particularly in a development context. Through discussions of theory and case studies, the volume provides the broad context for its companion, New Thinking on Industrial Policy: Implications for Africa.
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