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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 -
enhanced integration of all parts of the work.
Setting macroeconomic policy is especially difficult in fragile
states. Political legitimacy concerns are heightened, raising
issues such as who the policymakers are, what incentives they face,
and how the process of policymaking is likely to work under limited
legitimacy and high uncertainty both about the macroeconomic
environment as well as policy effectiveness. In addition, fragility
expands the range of policy objectives in ways that may constrain
the attainment of standard macroeconomic objectives. Specifically,
in the context of fragility policymakers also need to focus on
measures to mitigate fragility itself - i.e., they need to address
issues such as regional and ethnic economic disparities, youth
unemployment, and food price inflation. Socio-political
developments around the world have thus pushed policymakers to
broaden their toolkit to improve the effectiveness of macroeconomic
management in the face of these constraints. The chapters in
Macroeconomic Policy in Fragile States address these issues, both
by giving an analytical context from which policymakers can build
to answer the questions they face in fragile situations as well as
by providing lessons drawn from empirical analyses and case
studies. The first section of the volume discusses the interactions
between political economy considerations and macroeconomic
policymaking. The second section covers the private sector
environment in fragile states. The third section focuses on
macroeconomic policy, especially fiscal policy, monetary policy,
exchange rate policy, external flows, and aid effectiveness. The
last section explains the role of the IMF in fragile states and
concludes by presenting case studies from the Middle East and from
Sub-Saharan Africa. The contributors to the volume are economists
and political scientists from academia as well as policymakers from
international organizations and from countries affected by
fragility.
The global financial crisis triggered severe shocks for developing
countries, whose embrace of greater commercial and financial
openness has increased their exposure to external shocks, both real
and financial. This new edition of Development Macroeconomics has
been fully revised to address the more open and less stable
environment in which developing countries operate today. Describing
the latest advances in this rapidly changing field, the book
features expanded coverage of public debt and the management of
capital inflows as well as new material on fiscal discipline,
monetary policy regimes, currency, banking and sovereign debt
crises, currency unions, and the choice of an exchange-rate regime.
A new chapter on dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE)
models with financial frictions has been added to reflect how the
financial crisis has reshaped our thinking on the role of such
frictions in generating and propagating real and financial shocks.
The book also discusses the role of macroprudential regulation,
both independently and through its interactions with monetary
policy, in preserving financial and macroeconomic stability. Now in
its fourth edition, Development Macroeconomics remains the
definitive textbook on the macroeconomics of developing countries.
* The most authoritative book on the subject--now fully revised and
expanded* Features new material on fiscal discipline, monetary
policy regimes, currency, banking and sovereign debt crises, and
much more* Comes with online supplements on informal financial
markets, stabilization programs, the solution of DSGE models with
financial frictions, and exchange rate crises
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 -
enhanced integration of all parts of the work.
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