Development macroeconomics

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Hauptverfasser: Agénor, Pierre-Richard 1957- (VerfasserIn), Montiel, Peter 1951- (VerfasserIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Princeton, NJ [u.a.] Princeton Univ. Press 2008
Ausgabe:3. ed.
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Datensatz im Suchindex

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adam_text CONTENTS J PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION XIX INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW I 1 OVERVIEW OF THE BOOK 2 2 SOME METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES 7 1 I SCOPE OF DEVELOPMENT MACROECONOMICS 10 1 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND 12 2 ECONOMIC STRUCTURE AND MACROECONOMICS 14 2.1 OPENNESS TO TRADE IN GOODS AND ASSETS 15 2.2 EXCHANGE-RATE MANAGEMENT 17 2.3 DOMESTIC FINANCIAL MARKETS 17 2.4 THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET 18 2.5 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND THE LABOR MARKET 20 2.6 STABILITY OF POLICY REGIMES 22 2.7 MACROECONOMIC VOLATILITY AND FLUCTUATIONS 23 2.8 INCOME INEQUALITY 27 3 SOME SPECIAL TOPICS 28 PARTI MACROECONOMIC ACCOUNTS, MARKET STRUCTURE, AND BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONS 2 I AGGREGATE ACCOUNTS, PRODUCTION, AND MARKET STRUCTURE 35 1 A GENERAL ACCOUNTING FRAMEWORK 35 1.1 THE NONFINANCIAL PRIVATE SECTOR 36 1.2 THE PUBLIC SECTOR 37 1.2.1 THE NONFINANCIAL PUBLIC SECTOR 37 1.2.2 THE CENTRAL BANK 38 1.2.3 THE CONSOLIDATED PUBLIC SECTOR 39 1.3 THE COMMERCIAL BANKING SYSTEM 40 1.4 AGGREGATE RELATIONSHIPS 40 2 PRODUCTION STRUCTURE IN AN OPEN ECONOMY 41 2.1 THE MUNDELL-FLEMING MODEL 41 2.2 THE DEPENDENT ECONOMY MODEL 45 2.3 A MODEL WITH THREE GOODS 48 3 THE STRUCTURE OF LABOR MARKETS 51 3.1 FUNCTIONING OF LABOR MARKETS 52 3.2 OPEN AND DISGUISED UNEMPLOYMENT 54 VIII CONTENTS 3.3 INDEXATION AND WAGE RIGIDITY 55 3.4 LABOR MARKET SEGMENTATION 56 3 J BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONS 62 1 CONSUMPTION AND SAVING 62 1.1 CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING 66 1.2 PLANNING HORIZON AND LIQUIDITY CONSTRAINTS 67 1.3 LIQUIDITY CONSTRAINTS AND ASYMMETRIC EFFECTS 69 1.4 EFFECTS OF INTEREST RATE CHANGES ON SAVINGS 73 1.5 PUBLIC AND PRIVATE CONSUMPTION 74 2 PRIVATE INVESTMENT 74 2.1 CONVENTIONAL DETERMINANTS 75 2.2 REFORMULATION OF THEORIES 76 2.2.1 NATURE OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 76 2.2.2 IMPORTED GOODS 76 2.2.3 DEBT OVERHANG EFFECTS 77 2.2.4 ROLE OF PUBLIC CAPITAL 77 2.2.5 MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY AND UNCERTAINTY 78 2.3 UNCERTAINTY AND IRREVERSIBILITY EFFECTS 79 3 THE DEMAND FOR MONEY 82 3.1 CONVENTIONAL MODELS 83 3.2 CURRENCY SUBSTITUTION AND MONEY DEMAND 85 PART II FINANCIAL POLICIES 4 [ THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET AND FISCAL MANAGEMENT 91 1 THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET CONSTRAINT 92 2 THE MEASUREMENT OF FISCAL DEFICITS 94 3 CONTINGENT LIABILITIES 96 4 SEIGNIORAGE AND INFLATIONARY FINANCE 97 4.1 THE OPTIMAL INFLATION TAX 98 4.2 COLLECTION LAGS AND THE OLIVERA-TANZI EFFECT 100 4.3 COLLECTION COSTS AND TAX SYSTEM EFFICIENCY 105 4.4 FINANCIAL REPRESSION AND THE INFLATION TAX 106 5 POLICY CONSISTENCY AND SOLVENCY 111 5.1 THE INTERTEMPORAL SOLVENCY CONSTRAINT 112 5.2 FINANCING CONSTRAINTS AND POLICY CONSISTENCY 114 6 FISCAL RULES AND FISCAL DISCIPLINE 116 APPENDIX: FISCAL EFFECTS OF PRIVATIZATION 117 5 I MACROECONOMIC EFFECTS OF FISCAL POLICY 120 1 RICARDIAN EQUIVALENCE 120 2 DEFICITS, INFLATION, AND THE TIGHT MONEY PARADOX 122 CONTENTS IX 2.1 THE ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK 123 2.2 CONSTANT PRIMARY DEFICIT 125 2.3 CONSTANT CONVENTIONAL DEFICIT 127 3 DEFICITS, INTEREST RATES, AND CROWDING OUT 131 3.1 EXPECTATIONS, DEFICITS, AND REAL INTEREST RATES 131 3.2 DEFICITS, INVESTMENT, AND CROWDING OUT 137 4 BUDGET DEFICITS AND THE CURRENT ACCOUNT 138 5 EXPANSIONARY FISCAL CONTRACTIONS 139 6 FISCAL ADJUSTMENT AND THE LABOR MARKET 140 6.1 THE MODEL 141 6.1.1 THE FORMAL ECONOMY 142 6.1.2 THE INFORMAL SECTOR 145 6.1.3 CONSUMPTION AND WEALTH 145 6.1.4 MARKET FOR INFORMAL SECTOR GOODS 146 6.1.5 THE INFORMAL LABOR MARKET 146 6.1.6 GOVERNMENT 147 6.2 DYNAMIC STRUCTURE 147 6.3 STEADY-STATE SOLUTION 149 6.4 GOVERNMENT SPENDING CUT 152 6 J FINANCIAL MARKETS AND THE TRANSMISSION PROCESS OF MONETARY POLICY 154 1 FINANCIAL STRUCTURE AND THE ROLE OF BANKS 154 2 ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION AND CREDIT 156 2.1 THE STIGLITZ-WEISS MODEL OF CREDIT RATIONING 157 2.2 COSTLY-STATE VERIFICATION MODELS 162 2.2.1 BANK CREDIT AND THE SUPPLY SIDE 163 2.2.2 THE COST OF FUNDS-CONTRACTUAL INTEREST RATE CURVE 166 2.2.3 INTERMEDIATION COSTS, EMPLOYMENT, AND OUTPUT 169 2.3 NET WORTH AND BORROWING CONSTRAINTS 170 3 TRANSMISSION PROCESS OF MONETARY POLICY: AN OVERVIEW 176 3.1 THE PASS-THROUGH OF POLICY RATES TO MARKET RATES 176 3.2 INTEREST RATE EFFECTS 178 3.3 EXCHANGE-RATE EFFECTS 180 3.4 ASSET PRICES AND BALANCE SHEET EFFECTS 181 3.4.1 NET WORTH AND THE FINANCE PREMIUM 182 3.4.2 THE FINANCIAL ACCELERATOR 182 3.5 CREDIT AVAILABILITY EFFECTS 185 3.6 EXPECTATIONS 185 4 DOLLARIZATION 186 4.1 DETERMINANTS OF DOLLARIZATION 186 4.2 PERSISTENCE OF DOLLARIZATION 187 4.3 DOLLARIZATION AND MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT 188 CONTENTS 7 | A FRAMEWORK FOR MONETARY POLICY ANALYSIS 191 1 THE BASIC MODEL: FIXED EXCHANGE RATES 192 1.1 STRUCTURE OF THE MODEL 193 1.1.1 HOUSEHOLD PORTFOLIO ALLOCATION 193 1.1.2 COMMERCIAL BANKS 194 1.1.3 CENTRAL BANK 197 1.1.4 PRICE LEVEL AND THE REAL SECTOR 198 1.2 MODEL SOLUTION 199 1.3 POLICY AND EXOGENOUS SHOCKS 203 1.3.1 INCREASE IN THE REFINANCE RATE 203 1.3.2 CENTRAL BANK AUCTIONS 204 1.3.3 INCREASE IN THE REQUIRED RESERVE RATIO 206 1.3.4 SHIFTS IN THE RISK PREMIUM AND CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT COSTS 207 1.3.5 CHANGES IN PUBLIC EXPENDITURE AND WORLD INTEREST RATES 208 2 FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATES 209 2.1 MODEL STRUCTURE 209 2.2 SOLUTION 213 2.3 POLICY AND EXOGENOUS SHOCKS 218 2.3.1 INCREASE IN THE REFINANCE RATE 218 2.3.2 CENTRAL BANK AUCTIONS 219 2.3.3 INCREASE IN THE REQUIRED RESERVE RATIO 220 2.3.4 SHIFTS IN THE RISK PREMIUM AND CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT COSTS 221 2.3.5 CHANGES IN PUBLIC EXPENDITURE AND WORLD INTEREST RATES 222 3 EXTENSIONS 224 3.1 STERILIZATION 224 3.2 WORKING CAPITAL NEEDS 227 8 | INFLATION TARGETING AND INTEREST RATE RULES 232 1 BASIC FRAMEWORK: CLOSED ECONOMY 233 1.1 STRICT INFLATION TARGETING 234 1.2 POLICY TRADE-OFFS AND FLEXIBLE TARGETING 237 2 INFLATION TARGETING IN AN OPEN ECONOMY 240 3 COMPARISON WITH OTHER REGIMES 243 3.1 MONETARY TARGETING 243 3.2 EXCHANGE-RATE TARGETING 245 3.3 NOMINAL INCOME TARGETING 247 4 BASIC REQUIREMENTS FOR INFLATION TARGETING 253 4.1 CENTRAL BANK INDEPENDENCE AND CREDIBILITY 253 4.2 ABSENCE OF FISCAL DOMINANCE 254 CONTENTS XI 4.3 ABSENCE OF DE FACTO EXCHANGE-RATE TARGETING 254 4.4 HEALTHY FINANCIAL SYSTEM 255 4.5 TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY 256 5 INTEREST RATE RULES IN PRACTICE 257 6 SOME ANALYTICAL ISSUES 260 6.1 NON-QUADRATIC POLICY PREFERENCES 261 6.2 UNCERTAINTY AND OPTIMAL POLICY RULES 262 6.3 CONVEX PHILLIPS CURVE 265 9 I CHOOSING AN EXCHANGE-RATE REGIME I: CREDIBILITY, FLEXIBILITY, AND WELFARE 269 1 BASIC TYPOLOGY 269 2 EVOLUTION OF EXCHANGE-RATE REGIMES 270 3 POLICY TRADE-OFFS AND CREDIBILITY 272 3.1 TIME INCONSISTENCY AND EXCHANGE-RATE POLICY 273 3.2 CREDIBILITY OF A FIXED EXCHANGE RATE 278 3.3 REPUTATION, SIGNALING, AND COMMITMENT 278 4 CREDIBILITY VS. FLEXIBILITY: ROLE OF BANDS 281 4.1 RATIONALE FOR BANDS 282 4.2 BANDS AND MONETARY POLICY CREDIBILITY 283 4.3 EXPERIENCE WITH BANDS 285 5 CURRENCY UNIONS 286 5.1 CREDIBILITY EFFECTS OF MONETARY UNIONS 287 5.2 WELFARE EFFECTS OF OPTIMUM CURRENCY AREAS 290 5.2.1 THE MODEL 291 5.2.2 EQUILIBRIUM 293 5.2.3 WELFARE EFFECTS 294 APPENDIX: KRUGMAN S TARGET ZONE MODEL 297 10 I CHOOSING AN EXCHANGE-RATE REGIME H: THE ROLE OF SHOCKS, CONTRACTIONARY EFFECTS, AND MORAL HAZARD 302 1 ROLE OF SHOCKS 302 1.1 MODEL SPECIFICATION 302 1.2 MODEL SOLUTION 305 2 CONTRACTIONARY EFFECTS 309 2.1 EFFECTS ON AGGREGATE DEMAND 309 2.1.1 CONSUMPTION 310 2.1.2 INVESTMENT 319 2.1.3 NOMINAL INTEREST RATES 322 2.2 EFFECTS ON AGGREGATE SUPPLY 325 2.2.1 EFFECTS ON THE NOMINAL WAGE 325 2.2.2 IMPORTED INPUTS 328 2.2.3 EFFECTS THROUGH WORKING-CAPITAL COSTS 330 2.2.4 EFFECTS THROUGH BALANCE SHEETS 332 XII CONTENTS 3 MORAL HAZARD PROBLEMS 333 4 AN ASSESSMENT 333 PART III INFLATION STABILIZATION 11 I AN OVERVIEW OF STABILIZATION PROGRAMS 339 1 POPULISM 340 1.1 CHILE UNDER ALLENDE (1970-1973) 341 1.2 PERU UNDER GARCIA (1986-1990) 342 2 ORTHODOX MONEY-BASED STABILIZATION 343 2.1 CHILE {SEPTEMBER 1973) 343 2.2 BOLIVIA (AUGUST 29,1985) 345 3 EXCHANGE-RATE-BASED (SOUTHERN CONE) STABILIZATION PROGRAMS 347 3.1 CHILE (FEBRUARY 1978) 347 3.2 URUGUAY (OCTOBER 1978) 348 3.3 ARGENTINA (DECEMBER 1978) 350 4 HETERODOX PROGRAMS 351 4.1 ARGENTINA (JUNE 14,1985) 352 4.2 ISRAEL (JULY 1,1985) 355 4.3 BRAZIL (FEBRUARY 28,1986) 360 4.4 MEXICO (DECEMBER 1987) 362 5 ARGENTINA S CONVERTIBILITY PLAN (1991-1997) 364 6 BRAZIL S REAL PLAN (1994-1999) 367 7 LESSONS OF STABILIZATION 371 12 | INFLATION AND SHORT-RUN DYNAMICS 373 1 MODELS OF THE INFLATIONARY PROCESS 373 1.1 INFLATION, MONEY, AND FISCAL DEFICITS 374 1.1.1 ADAPTIVE EXPECTATIONS 376 1.1.2 PERFECT FORESIGHT 377 1.2 FOOD SUPPLY AND THE WAGE-PRICE CYCLE 380 1.3 A STRUCTURALIST-MONETARIST MODEL 385 2 DYNAMICS OF ALTERNATIVE POLICY RULES 388 2.1 A ONE-GOOD FRAMEWORK 388 2.1.1 HOUSEHOLDS 389 2.1.2 GOVERNMENT AND THE CENTRAL BANK 392 2.1.3 MONEY MARKET EQUILIBRIUM 393 2.1.4 DYNAMIC FORM 393 2.1.5 DEVALUATION RULE 395 2.1.6 CREDIT GROWTH RULE 398 2.1.7 DYNAMICS WITH ALTERNATIVE FISCAL POLICY RULES 400 2.2 A THREE-GOOD MODEL WITH FLEXIBLE PRICES 401 CONTENTS XIII 2.2.1 HOUSEHOLDS 401 2.2.2 OUTPUT AND THE LABOR MARKET 404 2.2.3 CENTRAL BANK AND THE GOVERNMENT 404 2.2.4 MARKET-CLEARING CONDITIONS 404 2.2.5 DYNAMIC FORM 405 2.2.6 POLICY EXPERIMENTS 408 2.3 EXTENSIONS 414 23.1 IMPORTED INTERMEDIATE INPUTS 414 2.3.2 STICKY PRICES 414 APPENDIX: IMPACT AND STEADY-STATE EFFECTS 417 13 | ANALYTICAL ISSUES IN DISINFLATION PROGRAMS 420 1 TOPICS IN EXCHANGE-RATE-BASED PROGRAMS 420 1.1 THE BOOM-RECESSION CYCLE 421 1.1.1 EXPECTATIONS, REAL INTEREST RATES, AND OUTPUT 421 1.1.2 THE TEMPORARINESS HYPOTHESIS 426 1.1.3 AN ASSESSMENT 434 1.2 THE BEHAVIOR OF REAL INTEREST RATES 440 1.2.1 CREDIBILITY, NOMINAL ANCHORS, AND INTEREST RATES 440 1.2.2 EXPECTATIONS, FISCAL ADJUSTMENT, AND INTEREST RATES 441 1.3 DISINFLATION AND REAL WAGES 443 2 ROLE OF CREDIBILITY IN DISINFLATION PROGRAMS 451 2.1 SOURCES OF CREDIBILITY PROBLEMS 452 2.1.1 INTERNAL INCONSISTENCY 452 2.1.2 TIME INCONSISTENCY 453 2.1.3 ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION 455 2.1.4 POLICY UNCERTAINTY AND STOCHASTIC SHOCKS 455 2.1.5 POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY 456 2.2 ENHANCING THE CREDIBILITY OF DISINFLATION PROGRAMS 457 2.2.1 SIGNALING AND SUSTAINABILITY 457 2.2.2 PRICE CONTROLS 459 2.2.3 CENTRAL BANK INDEPENDENCE 466 2.2.4 EXTERNAL ENFORCEMENT AND FOREIGN ASSISTANCE 468 2.2.5 SEQUENCING AND POLITICAL SUPPORT 470 2.3 POLICY LESSONS 472 3 DISINFLATION AND NOMINAL ANCHORS 474 APPENDIX: OUTPUT EFFECTS OF PRICE CONTROLS 477 PART IV CAPITAL FLOWS AND FINANCIAL CRISES 14 I FINANCIAL INTEGRATION, CAPITAL INFLOWS, AND SUDDEN STOPS 483 1 BENEFITS AND COSTS OF FINANCIAL INTEGRATION 484 1.1 POTENTIAL BENEFITS 484 XIV CONTENTS 1.1.1 CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING 484 1.1.2 DOMESTIC INVESTMENT AND GROWTH 485 1.1.3 ENHANCED MACROECONOMIC DISCIPLINE 488 1.1.4 BANKING SYSTEM EFFICIENCY AND FINANCIAL STABILITY 488 1.2 POTENTIAL COSTS 489 1.2.1 CONCENTRATION OF CAPITAL FLOWS AND LACK OF ACCESS 489 1.2.2 DOMESTIC MISALLOCATION OF CAPITAL FLOWS 489 1.2.3 LOSS OF MACROECONOMIC STABILITY 490 1.2.4 PROCYCLICALITY OF SHORT-TERM FLOWS 491 1.2.5 HERDING, CONTAGION, AND VOLATILITY OF CAPITAL FLOWS 491 1.2.6 RISK OF ENTRY BY FOREIGN BANKS 493 1.3 ASSESSING THE EVIDENCE 494 2 DETERMINANTS OF CAPITAL INFLOWS 498 2.T PULL FACTORS 499 2.2 PUSH FACTORS 500 2.3 ASSESSING THE EVIDENCE 504 3 MANAGING CAPITAL INFLOWS: POLICY OPTIONS 506 3.1 RESTRICTIONS ON GROSS INFLOWS 507 3.2 ENCOURAGEMENT OF GROSS OUTFLOWS 508 3.3 TRADE LIBERALIZATION 509 3.4 EXCHANGE-RATE FLEXIBILITY 510 3.5 STERILIZATION 511 3.6 POLICIES TO INFLUENCE THE MONEY MULTIPLIER 512 3.7 FISCAL CONTRACTION 513 4 SUDDEN STOPS 513 4.1 ALTERNATIVE MODELS 515 4.1.1 MODELS WITH MULTIPLE EQUILIBRIA 515 4.1.2 A SUDDEN STOP AS A UNIQUE EQUILIBRIUM 517 4.2 THE ROLE OF RESERVES AND POLICY RESPONSES 520 APPENDIX: MEASURING THE DEGREE OF FINANCIAL INTEGRATION 521 15 I EXCHANGE-RATE CRISES 525 1 CURRENCY CRISES: CONVENTIONAL APPROACH 526 1.1 THE BASIC MODEL 526 1.2 EXTENSIONS TO THE BASIC FRAMEWORK 532 1.2.1 STERILIZATION 532 1.2.2 ALTERNATIVE POST-COLLAPSE REGIMES 533 1.2.3 REAL EFFECTS OF AN ANTICIPATED COLLAPSE 534 1.2.4 BORROWING, CAPITAL CONTROLS, AND CRISIS POSTPONEMENT 536 1.2.5 INTEREST RATE DEFENSE 538 1.2.6 OTHER DIRECTIONS 539 2 POLICY TRADE-OFFS AND SELF-FUIFILLING CRISES 541 2.1 EXAMPLE BASED ON OUTPUT-INFLATION TRADE-OFFS 541 CONTENTS XV 2.2 PUBLIC DEBT AND SELF-FULFILLING CRISES 544 2.3 ROLE OF CREDIBILITY AND REPUTATION 545 2.4 OTHER SOURCES OF POLICY TRADE-OFFS 547 3 A CROSS-GENERATION FRAMEWORK 548 4 THIRD-GENERATION MODELS 549 5 EVIDENCE ON EXCHANGE-RATE CRISES 551 5.1 THE MEXICAN PESO CRISIS (DECEMBER 1994) 551 5.1.1 BACKGROUND: STRUCTURAL REFORMS AND THE SOLIDARITY PACT 552 5.1.2 POLICY RESPONSES TO CAPITAL INFLOWS, 1989-1993 553 5.1.3 THE BALANCE-OF-PAYMENTS CRISIS 554 5.2 THE THAI BAHT CRISIS (JULY 1997) 559 5.2.1 BACKGROUND 560 5.2.2 TRIGGERING EVENTS 561 5.2.3 EMERGENCE AND MANAGEMENT OF THE CRISIS 562 5.3 BRAZIL S REAL CRISIS (JANUARY 1999) 567 5.4 ARGENTINA S PESO CRISIS (JANUARY 2002) 569 5.4.1 BACKGROUND 569 5.4.2 THE BUILDUP OF VULNERABILITY 571 5.4.3 A PERFECT STORM IN 1998-2001 573 5.4.4 THE CRISIS 574 APPENDIX: CREDIBILITY, REPUTATION, AND CURRENCY CRISES 576 16 | BANKING CRISES AND TWIN CRISES 579 1 BANKS AS MATURITY TRANSFORMERS 581 1.1 THE DIAMOND-DYBVIG FRAMEWORK 581 1.2 BUSINESS CYCLES AND BANKING CRISES 584 2 TWIN CRISES 585 2.1 A BASIC MODEL WITH CLOSE LINKAGES 586 2.2 THE CHANG-VELASCO FRAMEWORK 589 2.3 THE FLOOD-MARION JOINT DISTRIBUTION APPROACH 592 3 ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION AND OPPORTUNISM 592 4 DETERMINANTS OF BANKING CRISES: EVIDENCE 594 4.1 EPISODIC CROSS-COUNTRY EVIDENCE 595 4.2 SIGNALING APPROACH 596 4.3 ECONOMETRIC INVESTIGATIONS 597 PARTV GROWTH, STRUCTURAL REFORMS, AND POLITICAL ECONOMY 17 I MACROECONOMIC POLICIES AND GROWTH 603 1 THE NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH MODEL 604 2 EXTERNALITIES AND INCREASING RETURNS 608 3 HUMAN CAPITAL, KNOWLEDGE, AND GROWTH 610 XVI CONTENTS 3.1 THE PRODUCTION OF HUMAN CAPITAL. 6IO 3.2 THE PRODUCTION OF KNOWLEDGE 611 4 GOVERNMENT SPENDING, TAXES, AND GROWTH 615 4.1 THE BARRO MODEL 618 4.2 INFRASTRUCTURE, HEALTH, AND GROWTH 620 4.2.1 PRODUCTION 620 4.2.2 HOUSEHOLD PREFERENCES 620 4.2.3 PRODUCTION OF HEALTH SERVICES 621 4.2.4 GOVERNMENT 621 4.3 THE DECENTRALIZED EQUILIBRIUM 622 4.4 OPTIMAL POLICIES 624 4.5 A STOCK APPROACH 627 5 FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION AND GROWTH 630 5.1 EFFECTS ON THE SAVING RATE 631 5.2 EFFECTS ON THE ALLOCATION OF CAPITAL 631 5.3 INTERMEDIATION COSTS AND EFFICIENCY 632 6 INFLATION AND GROWTH 634 7 MACROECONOMIC VOLATILITY AND GROWTH 636 18 | TRADE LIBERALIZATION, FINANCIAL-SECTOR REFORMS, AND SEQUENCING 639 1 TRADE REFORM 640 1.1 ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK 642 1.1.1 OUTPUT, TURNOVER COSTS, AND WAGES 643 1.1.2 CONSUMPTION AND THE MARKET FOR NONTRADED GOODS 645 1.1.3 GOVERNMENT 646 1.1.4 LABOR MARKET ADJUSTMENT 646 1.2 TARIFFS, REAL WAGES, AND EMPLOYMENT 650 1.2.1 STEADY-STATE EFFECTS 650 1.2.2 SHORT-RUN DYNAMICS 652 2 FINANCIAL LIBERALIZATION 655 2.1 DEREGULATION OF INTEREST RATES 656 2.2 BROADER ASPECTS OF FINANCIAL LIBERALIZATION 658 2.3 ROLE OF REGULATION AND SUPERVISION 659 3 SEQUENCING OF REFORMS 663 3.1 STABILIZATION, FINANCIAL REFORM, AND CAPITAL ACCOUNT OPENING 663 3.2 CAPITAL AND CURRENT ACCOUNT LIBERALIZATION 666 3.3 MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION AND TRADE REFORM 668 4 ADJUSTMENT COSTS, CREDIBILITY, AND THE SPEED OF REFORM 671 19 I THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ADJUSTMENT 673 1 POLITICS, ECONOMIC POLICY, AND ADJUSTMENT 673 1.1 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF REFORM 674 CONTENTS XVII 1.2 POLITICAL INSTABILITY, INFLATION, AND FISCAL DEFICITS 676 2 CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND ECONOMIC REFORMS 677 2.1 THE UNCERTAIN-BENEFITS APPROACH 677 2.2 THE DISTRIBUTIONAL CONFLICT APPROACH 678 3 POLITICAL STABILIZATION CYCLES 682 3.1 OPPORTUNISTIC MODELS 683 3.1.1 ELECTIONS, INFLATION, AND UNEMPLOYMENT 683 3.1.2 ELECTIONS AND DEVALUATION CYCLES 686 3.2 MODELS WITH INFORMATIONAL ASYMMETRIES 690 4 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF FISCAL RULES 692 | EPILOGUE 694 | REFERENCES 699 | INDEX OF NAMES 751 I INDEX OF SUBJECTS 761 ince it was first published in 1995, Development Macroeconomics has remained the definitive textbook on the macroeconomics of developing countries. Now, in this fully revised and updated third edition, Pierre-Richard Agenor and Peter Mon¬ tiéi cover the latest advances in this rapidly changing field, making this the most up-to- date, authoritative, and comprehensive book available on the macroeconomic issues and challenges developing nations confront today. Agénor and Montiéi provide completely new and expanded coverage of fiscal discipline, monetary policy regimes, currency and bank¬ ing crises, monetary unions, management of capital flows, the choice of an exchange-rate regime, public capital and growth, the political economy of stabilization and adjustment — and much more. They review attempts that have been made to adapt standard macroeco¬ nomic analysis to conditions in developing economies, and they use a variety of analytical models to address the macroeconomic policy issues that most concern these countries. Agénor and Montiéi systematically examine empirical evidence on behavioral assumptions and on the effects of macroeconomic poli¬ cies in developing nations.They also provide extensive references to literature in the field. This new edition of Development Macroeco¬ nomics is the ¡deal introduction for students and an indispensable resource for researchers. К Fully updated and expanded E Provides the most comprehensive treat¬ ment of the macroeconomics of developing nations E Features new material on fiscal discipline, monetary policy regimes, currency and banking crises — and much more m Includes extensive references В Serves both as a graduate textbook and a resource for researchers
adam_txt CONTENTS J PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION XIX INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW I 1 OVERVIEW OF THE BOOK 2 2 SOME METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES 7 1 I SCOPE OF DEVELOPMENT MACROECONOMICS 10 1 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND 12 2 ECONOMIC STRUCTURE AND MACROECONOMICS 14 2.1 OPENNESS TO TRADE IN GOODS AND ASSETS 15 2.2 EXCHANGE-RATE MANAGEMENT 17 2.3 DOMESTIC FINANCIAL MARKETS 17 2.4 THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET 18 2.5 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND THE LABOR MARKET 20 2.6 STABILITY OF POLICY REGIMES 22 2.7 MACROECONOMIC VOLATILITY AND FLUCTUATIONS 23 2.8 INCOME INEQUALITY 27 3 SOME SPECIAL TOPICS 28 PARTI MACROECONOMIC ACCOUNTS, MARKET STRUCTURE, AND BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONS 2 I AGGREGATE ACCOUNTS, PRODUCTION, AND MARKET STRUCTURE 35 1 A GENERAL ACCOUNTING FRAMEWORK 35 1.1 THE NONFINANCIAL PRIVATE SECTOR 36 1.2 THE PUBLIC SECTOR 37 1.2.1 THE NONFINANCIAL PUBLIC SECTOR 37 1.2.2 THE CENTRAL BANK 38 1.2.3 THE CONSOLIDATED PUBLIC SECTOR 39 1.3 THE COMMERCIAL BANKING SYSTEM 40 1.4 AGGREGATE RELATIONSHIPS 40 2 PRODUCTION STRUCTURE IN AN OPEN ECONOMY 41 2.1 THE MUNDELL-FLEMING MODEL 41 2.2 THE "DEPENDENT ECONOMY" MODEL 45 2.3 A MODEL WITH THREE GOODS 48 3 THE STRUCTURE OF LABOR MARKETS 51 3.1 FUNCTIONING OF LABOR MARKETS 52 3.2 OPEN AND DISGUISED UNEMPLOYMENT 54 VIII CONTENTS 3.3 INDEXATION AND WAGE RIGIDITY 55 3.4 LABOR MARKET SEGMENTATION 56 3 J BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONS 62 1 CONSUMPTION AND SAVING 62 1.1 CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING 66 1.2 PLANNING HORIZON AND LIQUIDITY CONSTRAINTS 67 1.3 LIQUIDITY CONSTRAINTS AND ASYMMETRIC EFFECTS 69 1.4 EFFECTS OF INTEREST RATE CHANGES ON SAVINGS 73 1.5 PUBLIC AND PRIVATE CONSUMPTION 74 2 PRIVATE INVESTMENT 74 2.1 CONVENTIONAL DETERMINANTS 75 2.2 REFORMULATION OF THEORIES 76 2.2.1 NATURE OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 76 2.2.2 IMPORTED GOODS 76 2.2.3 DEBT OVERHANG EFFECTS 77 2.2.4 ROLE OF PUBLIC CAPITAL 77 2.2.5 MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY AND UNCERTAINTY 78 2.3 UNCERTAINTY AND IRREVERSIBILITY EFFECTS 79 3 THE DEMAND FOR MONEY 82 3.1 CONVENTIONAL MODELS 83 3.2 CURRENCY SUBSTITUTION AND MONEY DEMAND 85 PART II FINANCIAL POLICIES 4 [ THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET AND FISCAL MANAGEMENT 91 1 THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET CONSTRAINT 92 2 THE MEASUREMENT OF FISCAL DEFICITS 94 3 CONTINGENT LIABILITIES 96 4 SEIGNIORAGE AND INFLATIONARY FINANCE 97 4.1 THE OPTIMAL INFLATION TAX 98 4.2 COLLECTION LAGS AND THE OLIVERA-TANZI EFFECT 100 4.3 COLLECTION COSTS AND TAX SYSTEM EFFICIENCY 105 4.4 FINANCIAL REPRESSION AND THE INFLATION TAX 106 5 POLICY CONSISTENCY AND SOLVENCY 111 5.1 THE INTERTEMPORAL SOLVENCY CONSTRAINT 112 5.2 FINANCING CONSTRAINTS AND POLICY CONSISTENCY 114 6 FISCAL RULES AND FISCAL DISCIPLINE 116 APPENDIX: FISCAL EFFECTS OF PRIVATIZATION 117 5 I MACROECONOMIC EFFECTS OF FISCAL POLICY 120 1 RICARDIAN EQUIVALENCE 120 2 DEFICITS, INFLATION, AND THE "TIGHT MONEY" PARADOX 122 CONTENTS IX 2.1 THE ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK 123 2.2 CONSTANT PRIMARY DEFICIT 125 2.3 CONSTANT CONVENTIONAL DEFICIT 127 3 DEFICITS, INTEREST RATES, AND CROWDING OUT 131 3.1 EXPECTATIONS, DEFICITS, AND REAL INTEREST RATES 131 3.2 DEFICITS, INVESTMENT, AND CROWDING OUT 137 4 BUDGET DEFICITS AND THE CURRENT ACCOUNT 138 5 EXPANSIONARY FISCAL CONTRACTIONS 139 6 FISCAL ADJUSTMENT AND THE LABOR MARKET 140 6.1 THE MODEL 141 6.1.1 THE FORMAL ECONOMY 142 6.1.2 THE INFORMAL SECTOR 145 6.1.3 CONSUMPTION AND WEALTH 145 6.1.4 MARKET FOR INFORMAL SECTOR GOODS 146 6.1.5 THE INFORMAL LABOR MARKET 146 6.1.6 GOVERNMENT 147 6.2 DYNAMIC STRUCTURE 147 6.3 STEADY-STATE SOLUTION 149 6.4 GOVERNMENT SPENDING CUT 152 6 J FINANCIAL MARKETS AND THE TRANSMISSION PROCESS OF MONETARY POLICY 154 1 FINANCIAL STRUCTURE AND THE ROLE OF BANKS 154 2 ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION AND CREDIT 156 2.1 THE STIGLITZ-WEISS MODEL OF CREDIT RATIONING 157 2.2 COSTLY-STATE VERIFICATION MODELS 162 2.2.1 BANK CREDIT AND THE SUPPLY SIDE 163 2.2.2 THE COST OF FUNDS-CONTRACTUAL INTEREST RATE CURVE 166 2.2.3 INTERMEDIATION COSTS, EMPLOYMENT, AND OUTPUT 169 2.3 NET WORTH AND BORROWING CONSTRAINTS 170 3 TRANSMISSION PROCESS OF MONETARY POLICY: AN OVERVIEW 176 3.1 THE PASS-THROUGH OF POLICY RATES TO MARKET RATES 176 3.2 INTEREST RATE EFFECTS 178 3.3 EXCHANGE-RATE EFFECTS 180 3.4 ASSET PRICES AND BALANCE SHEET EFFECTS 181 3.4.1 NET WORTH AND THE FINANCE PREMIUM 182 3.4.2 THE FINANCIAL ACCELERATOR 182 3.5 CREDIT AVAILABILITY EFFECTS 185 3.6 EXPECTATIONS 185 4 DOLLARIZATION 186 4.1 DETERMINANTS OF DOLLARIZATION 186 4.2 PERSISTENCE OF DOLLARIZATION 187 4.3 DOLLARIZATION AND MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT 188 CONTENTS 7 | A FRAMEWORK FOR MONETARY POLICY ANALYSIS 191 1 THE BASIC MODEL: FIXED EXCHANGE RATES 192 1.1 STRUCTURE OF THE MODEL 193 1.1.1 HOUSEHOLD PORTFOLIO ALLOCATION 193 1.1.2 COMMERCIAL BANKS 194 1.1.3 CENTRAL BANK 197 1.1.4 PRICE LEVEL AND THE REAL SECTOR 198 1.2 MODEL SOLUTION 199 1.3 POLICY AND EXOGENOUS SHOCKS 203 1.3.1 INCREASE IN THE REFINANCE RATE 203 1.3.2 CENTRAL BANK AUCTIONS 204 1.3.3 INCREASE IN THE REQUIRED RESERVE RATIO 206 1.3.4 SHIFTS IN THE RISK PREMIUM AND CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT COSTS 207 1.3.5 CHANGES IN PUBLIC EXPENDITURE AND WORLD INTEREST RATES 208 2 FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATES 209 2.1 MODEL STRUCTURE 209 2.2 SOLUTION 213 2.3 POLICY AND EXOGENOUS SHOCKS 218 2.3.1 INCREASE IN THE REFINANCE RATE 218 2.3.2 CENTRAL BANK AUCTIONS 219 2.3.3 INCREASE IN THE REQUIRED RESERVE RATIO 220 2.3.4 SHIFTS IN THE RISK PREMIUM AND CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT COSTS 221 2.3.5 CHANGES IN PUBLIC EXPENDITURE AND WORLD INTEREST RATES 222 3 EXTENSIONS 224 3.1 STERILIZATION 224 3.2 WORKING CAPITAL NEEDS 227 8 | INFLATION TARGETING AND INTEREST RATE RULES 232 1 BASIC FRAMEWORK: CLOSED ECONOMY 233 1.1 STRICT INFLATION TARGETING 234 1.2 POLICY TRADE-OFFS AND FLEXIBLE TARGETING 237 2 INFLATION TARGETING IN AN OPEN ECONOMY 240 3 COMPARISON WITH OTHER REGIMES 243 3.1 MONETARY TARGETING 243 3.2 EXCHANGE-RATE TARGETING 245 3.3 NOMINAL INCOME TARGETING 247 4 BASIC REQUIREMENTS FOR INFLATION TARGETING 253 4.1 CENTRAL BANK INDEPENDENCE AND CREDIBILITY 253 4.2 ABSENCE OF FISCAL DOMINANCE 254 CONTENTS XI 4.3 ABSENCE OF DE FACTO EXCHANGE-RATE TARGETING 254 4.4 HEALTHY FINANCIAL SYSTEM 255 4.5 TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY 256 5 INTEREST RATE RULES IN PRACTICE 257 6 SOME ANALYTICAL ISSUES 260 6.1 NON-QUADRATIC POLICY PREFERENCES 261 6.2 UNCERTAINTY AND OPTIMAL POLICY RULES 262 6.3 CONVEX PHILLIPS CURVE 265 9 I CHOOSING AN EXCHANGE-RATE REGIME I: CREDIBILITY, FLEXIBILITY, AND WELFARE 269 1 BASIC TYPOLOGY 269 2 EVOLUTION OF EXCHANGE-RATE REGIMES 270 3 POLICY TRADE-OFFS AND CREDIBILITY 272 3.1 TIME INCONSISTENCY AND EXCHANGE-RATE POLICY 273 3.2 CREDIBILITY OF A FIXED EXCHANGE RATE 278 3.3 REPUTATION, SIGNALING, AND COMMITMENT 278 4 CREDIBILITY VS. FLEXIBILITY: ROLE OF BANDS 281 4.1 RATIONALE FOR BANDS 282 4.2 BANDS AND MONETARY POLICY CREDIBILITY 283 4.3 EXPERIENCE WITH BANDS 285 5 CURRENCY UNIONS 286 5.1 CREDIBILITY EFFECTS OF MONETARY UNIONS 287 5.2 WELFARE EFFECTS OF OPTIMUM CURRENCY AREAS 290 5.2.1 THE MODEL 291 5.2.2 EQUILIBRIUM 293 5.2.3 WELFARE EFFECTS 294 APPENDIX: KRUGMAN'S TARGET ZONE MODEL 297 10 I CHOOSING AN EXCHANGE-RATE REGIME H: THE ROLE OF SHOCKS, CONTRACTIONARY EFFECTS, AND MORAL HAZARD 302 1 ROLE OF SHOCKS 302 1.1 MODEL SPECIFICATION 302 1.2 MODEL SOLUTION 305 2 CONTRACTIONARY EFFECTS 309 2.1 EFFECTS ON AGGREGATE DEMAND 309 2.1.1 CONSUMPTION 310 2.1.2 INVESTMENT 319 2.1.3 NOMINAL INTEREST RATES 322 2.2 EFFECTS ON AGGREGATE SUPPLY 325 2.2.1 EFFECTS ON THE NOMINAL WAGE 325 2.2.2 IMPORTED INPUTS 328 2.2.3 EFFECTS THROUGH WORKING-CAPITAL COSTS 330 2.2.4 EFFECTS THROUGH BALANCE SHEETS 332 XII CONTENTS 3 MORAL HAZARD PROBLEMS 333 4 AN ASSESSMENT 333 PART III INFLATION STABILIZATION 11 I AN OVERVIEW OF STABILIZATION PROGRAMS 339 1 POPULISM 340 1.1 CHILE UNDER ALLENDE (1970-1973) 341 1.2 PERU UNDER GARCIA (1986-1990) 342 2 ORTHODOX MONEY-BASED STABILIZATION 343 2.1 CHILE {SEPTEMBER 1973) 343 2.2 BOLIVIA (AUGUST 29,1985) 345 3 EXCHANGE-RATE-BASED (SOUTHERN CONE) STABILIZATION PROGRAMS 347 3.1 CHILE (FEBRUARY 1978) 347 3.2 URUGUAY (OCTOBER 1978) 348 3.3 ARGENTINA (DECEMBER 1978) 350 4 HETERODOX PROGRAMS 351 4.1 ARGENTINA (JUNE 14,1985) 352 4.2 ISRAEL (JULY 1,1985) 355 4.3 BRAZIL (FEBRUARY 28,1986) 360 4.4 MEXICO (DECEMBER 1987) 362 5 ARGENTINA'S CONVERTIBILITY PLAN (1991-1997) 364 6 BRAZIL'S REAL PLAN (1994-1999) 367 7 LESSONS OF STABILIZATION 371 12 | INFLATION AND SHORT-RUN DYNAMICS 373 1 MODELS OF THE INFLATIONARY PROCESS 373 1.1 INFLATION, MONEY, AND FISCAL DEFICITS 374 1.1.1 ADAPTIVE EXPECTATIONS 376 1.1.2 PERFECT FORESIGHT 377 1.2 FOOD SUPPLY AND THE WAGE-PRICE CYCLE 380 1.3 A STRUCTURALIST-MONETARIST MODEL 385 2 DYNAMICS OF ALTERNATIVE POLICY RULES 388 2.1 A ONE-GOOD FRAMEWORK 388 2.1.1 HOUSEHOLDS 389 2.1.2 GOVERNMENT AND THE CENTRAL BANK 392 2.1.3 MONEY MARKET EQUILIBRIUM 393 2.1.4 DYNAMIC FORM 393 2.1.5 DEVALUATION RULE 395 2.1.6 CREDIT GROWTH RULE 398 2.1.7 DYNAMICS WITH ALTERNATIVE FISCAL POLICY RULES 400 2.2 A THREE-GOOD MODEL WITH FLEXIBLE PRICES 401 CONTENTS XIII 2.2.1 HOUSEHOLDS 401 2.2.2 OUTPUT AND THE LABOR MARKET 404 2.2.3 CENTRAL BANK AND THE GOVERNMENT 404 2.2.4 MARKET-CLEARING CONDITIONS 404 2.2.5 DYNAMIC FORM 405 2.2.6 POLICY EXPERIMENTS 408 2.3 EXTENSIONS 414 23.1 IMPORTED INTERMEDIATE INPUTS 414 2.3.2 STICKY PRICES 414 APPENDIX: IMPACT AND STEADY-STATE EFFECTS 417 13 | ANALYTICAL ISSUES IN DISINFLATION PROGRAMS 420 1 TOPICS IN EXCHANGE-RATE-BASED PROGRAMS 420 1.1 THE BOOM-RECESSION CYCLE 421 1.1.1 EXPECTATIONS, REAL INTEREST RATES, AND OUTPUT 421 1.1.2 THE "TEMPORARINESS" HYPOTHESIS 426 1.1.3 AN ASSESSMENT 434 1.2 THE BEHAVIOR OF REAL INTEREST RATES 440 1.2.1 CREDIBILITY, NOMINAL ANCHORS, AND INTEREST RATES 440 1.2.2 EXPECTATIONS, FISCAL ADJUSTMENT, AND INTEREST RATES 441 1.3 DISINFLATION AND REAL WAGES 443 2 ROLE OF CREDIBILITY IN DISINFLATION PROGRAMS 451 2.1 SOURCES OF CREDIBILITY PROBLEMS 452 2.1.1 INTERNAL INCONSISTENCY 452 2.1.2 TIME INCONSISTENCY 453 2.1.3 ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION 455 2.1.4 POLICY UNCERTAINTY AND STOCHASTIC SHOCKS 455 2.1.5 POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY 456 2.2 ENHANCING THE CREDIBILITY OF DISINFLATION PROGRAMS 457 2.2.1 SIGNALING AND SUSTAINABILITY 457 2.2.2 PRICE CONTROLS 459 2.2.3 CENTRAL BANK INDEPENDENCE 466 2.2.4 EXTERNAL ENFORCEMENT AND FOREIGN ASSISTANCE 468 2.2.5 SEQUENCING AND POLITICAL SUPPORT 470 2.3 POLICY LESSONS 472 3 DISINFLATION AND NOMINAL ANCHORS 474 APPENDIX: OUTPUT EFFECTS OF PRICE CONTROLS 477 PART IV CAPITAL FLOWS AND FINANCIAL CRISES 14 I FINANCIAL INTEGRATION, CAPITAL INFLOWS, AND SUDDEN STOPS 483 1 BENEFITS AND COSTS OF FINANCIAL INTEGRATION 484 1.1 POTENTIAL BENEFITS 484 XIV CONTENTS 1.1.1 CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING 484 1.1.2 DOMESTIC INVESTMENT AND GROWTH 485 1.1.3 ENHANCED MACROECONOMIC DISCIPLINE 488 1.1.4 BANKING SYSTEM EFFICIENCY AND FINANCIAL STABILITY 488 1.2 POTENTIAL COSTS 489 1.2.1 CONCENTRATION OF CAPITAL FLOWS AND LACK OF ACCESS 489 1.2.2 DOMESTIC MISALLOCATION OF CAPITAL FLOWS 489 1.2.3 LOSS OF MACROECONOMIC STABILITY 490 1.2.4 PROCYCLICALITY OF SHORT-TERM FLOWS 491 1.2.5 HERDING, CONTAGION, AND VOLATILITY OF CAPITAL FLOWS 491 1.2.6 RISK OF ENTRY BY FOREIGN BANKS 493 1.3 ASSESSING THE EVIDENCE 494 2 DETERMINANTS OF CAPITAL INFLOWS 498 2.T "PULL" FACTORS 499 2.2 "PUSH" FACTORS 500 2.3 ASSESSING THE EVIDENCE 504 3 MANAGING CAPITAL INFLOWS: POLICY OPTIONS 506 3.1 RESTRICTIONS ON GROSS INFLOWS 507 3.2 ENCOURAGEMENT OF GROSS OUTFLOWS 508 3.3 TRADE LIBERALIZATION 509 3.4 EXCHANGE-RATE FLEXIBILITY 510 3.5 STERILIZATION 511 3.6 POLICIES TO INFLUENCE THE MONEY MULTIPLIER 512 3.7 FISCAL CONTRACTION 513 4 SUDDEN STOPS 513 4.1 ALTERNATIVE MODELS 515 4.1.1 MODELS WITH MULTIPLE EQUILIBRIA 515 4.1.2 A SUDDEN STOP AS A UNIQUE EQUILIBRIUM 517 4.2 THE ROLE OF RESERVES AND POLICY RESPONSES 520 APPENDIX: MEASURING THE DEGREE OF FINANCIAL INTEGRATION 521 15 I EXCHANGE-RATE CRISES 525 1 CURRENCY CRISES: CONVENTIONAL APPROACH 526 1.1 THE BASIC MODEL 526 1.2 EXTENSIONS TO THE BASIC FRAMEWORK 532 1.2.1 STERILIZATION 532 1.2.2 ALTERNATIVE POST-COLLAPSE REGIMES 533 1.2.3 REAL EFFECTS OF AN ANTICIPATED COLLAPSE 534 1.2.4 BORROWING, CAPITAL CONTROLS, AND CRISIS POSTPONEMENT 536 1.2.5 INTEREST RATE DEFENSE 538 1.2.6 OTHER DIRECTIONS 539 2 POLICY TRADE-OFFS AND SELF-FUIFILLING CRISES 541 2.1 EXAMPLE BASED ON OUTPUT-INFLATION TRADE-OFFS 541 CONTENTS XV 2.2 PUBLIC DEBT AND SELF-FULFILLING CRISES 544 2.3 ROLE OF CREDIBILITY AND REPUTATION 545 2.4 OTHER SOURCES OF POLICY TRADE-OFFS 547 3 A "CROSS-GENERATION" FRAMEWORK 548 4 THIRD-GENERATION MODELS 549 5 EVIDENCE ON EXCHANGE-RATE CRISES 551 5.1 THE MEXICAN PESO CRISIS (DECEMBER 1994) 551 5.1.1 BACKGROUND: STRUCTURAL REFORMS AND THE SOLIDARITY PACT 552 5.1.2 POLICY RESPONSES TO CAPITAL INFLOWS, 1989-1993 553 5.1.3 THE BALANCE-OF-PAYMENTS CRISIS 554 5.2 THE THAI BAHT CRISIS (JULY 1997) 559 5.2.1 BACKGROUND 560 5.2.2 TRIGGERING EVENTS 561 5.2.3 EMERGENCE AND MANAGEMENT OF THE CRISIS 562 5.3 BRAZIL'S REAL CRISIS (JANUARY 1999) 567 5.4 ARGENTINA'S PESO CRISIS (JANUARY 2002) 569 5.4.1 BACKGROUND 569 5.4.2 THE BUILDUP OF VULNERABILITY 571 5.4.3 A "PERFECT STORM" IN 1998-2001 573 5.4.4 THE CRISIS 574 APPENDIX: CREDIBILITY, REPUTATION, AND CURRENCY CRISES 576 16 | BANKING CRISES AND TWIN CRISES 579 1 BANKS AS MATURITY TRANSFORMERS 581 1.1 THE DIAMOND-DYBVIG FRAMEWORK 581 1.2 BUSINESS CYCLES AND BANKING CRISES 584 2 TWIN CRISES 585 2.1 A BASIC MODEL WITH CLOSE LINKAGES 586 2.2 THE CHANG-VELASCO FRAMEWORK 589 2.3 THE FLOOD-MARION JOINT DISTRIBUTION APPROACH 592 3 ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION AND OPPORTUNISM 592 4 DETERMINANTS OF BANKING CRISES: EVIDENCE 594 4.1 EPISODIC CROSS-COUNTRY EVIDENCE 595 4.2 SIGNALING APPROACH 596 4.3 ECONOMETRIC INVESTIGATIONS 597 PARTV GROWTH, STRUCTURAL REFORMS, AND POLITICAL ECONOMY 17 I MACROECONOMIC POLICIES AND GROWTH 603 1 THE NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH MODEL 604 2 EXTERNALITIES AND INCREASING RETURNS 608 3 HUMAN CAPITAL, KNOWLEDGE, AND GROWTH 610 XVI CONTENTS 3.1 THE PRODUCTION OF HUMAN CAPITAL. 6IO 3.2 THE PRODUCTION OF KNOWLEDGE 611 4 GOVERNMENT SPENDING, TAXES, AND GROWTH 615 4.1 THE BARRO MODEL 618 4.2 INFRASTRUCTURE, HEALTH, AND GROWTH 620 4.2.1 PRODUCTION 620 4.2.2 HOUSEHOLD PREFERENCES 620 4.2.3 PRODUCTION OF HEALTH SERVICES 621 4.2.4 GOVERNMENT 621 4.3 THE DECENTRALIZED EQUILIBRIUM 622 4.4 OPTIMAL POLICIES 624 4.5 A STOCK APPROACH 627 5 FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION AND GROWTH 630 5.1 EFFECTS ON THE SAVING RATE 631 5.2 EFFECTS ON THE ALLOCATION OF CAPITAL 631 5.3 INTERMEDIATION COSTS AND EFFICIENCY 632 6 INFLATION AND GROWTH 634 7 MACROECONOMIC VOLATILITY AND GROWTH 636 18 | TRADE LIBERALIZATION, FINANCIAL-SECTOR REFORMS, AND SEQUENCING 639 1 TRADE REFORM 640 1.1 ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK 642 1.1.1 OUTPUT, TURNOVER COSTS, AND WAGES 643 1.1.2 CONSUMPTION AND THE MARKET FOR NONTRADED GOODS 645 1.1.3 GOVERNMENT 646 1.1.4 LABOR MARKET ADJUSTMENT 646 1.2 TARIFFS, REAL WAGES, AND EMPLOYMENT 650 1.2.1 STEADY-STATE EFFECTS 650 1.2.2 SHORT-RUN DYNAMICS 652 2 FINANCIAL LIBERALIZATION 655 2.1 DEREGULATION OF INTEREST RATES 656 2.2 BROADER ASPECTS OF FINANCIAL LIBERALIZATION 658 2.3 ROLE OF REGULATION AND SUPERVISION 659 3 SEQUENCING OF REFORMS 663 3.1 STABILIZATION, FINANCIAL REFORM, AND CAPITAL ACCOUNT OPENING 663 3.2 CAPITAL AND CURRENT ACCOUNT LIBERALIZATION 666 3.3 MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION AND TRADE REFORM 668 4 ADJUSTMENT COSTS, CREDIBILITY, AND THE SPEED OF REFORM 671 19 I THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ADJUSTMENT 673 1 POLITICS, ECONOMIC POLICY, AND ADJUSTMENT 673 1.1 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF REFORM 674 CONTENTS XVII 1.2 POLITICAL INSTABILITY, INFLATION, AND FISCAL DEFICITS 676 2 CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND ECONOMIC REFORMS 677 2.1 THE UNCERTAIN-BENEFITS APPROACH 677 2.2 THE DISTRIBUTIONAL CONFLICT APPROACH 678 3 POLITICAL STABILIZATION CYCLES 682 3.1 OPPORTUNISTIC MODELS 683 3.1.1 ELECTIONS, INFLATION, AND UNEMPLOYMENT 683 3.1.2 ELECTIONS AND DEVALUATION CYCLES 686 3.2 MODELS WITH INFORMATIONAL ASYMMETRIES 690 4 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF FISCAL RULES 692 | EPILOGUE 694 | REFERENCES 699 | INDEX OF NAMES 751 I INDEX OF SUBJECTS 761 ince it was first published in 1995, Development Macroeconomics has remained the definitive textbook on the macroeconomics of developing countries. Now, in this fully revised and updated third edition, Pierre-Richard Agenor and Peter Mon¬ tiéi cover the latest advances in this rapidly changing field, making this the most up-to- date, authoritative, and comprehensive book available on the macroeconomic issues and challenges developing nations confront today. Agénor and Montiéi provide completely new and expanded coverage of fiscal discipline, monetary policy regimes, currency and bank¬ ing crises, monetary unions, management of capital flows, the choice of an exchange-rate regime, public capital and growth, the political economy of stabilization and adjustment — and much more. They review attempts that have been made to adapt standard macroeco¬ nomic analysis to conditions in developing economies, and they use a variety of analytical models to address the macroeconomic policy issues that most concern these countries. Agénor and Montiéi systematically examine empirical evidence on behavioral assumptions and on the effects of macroeconomic poli¬ cies in developing nations.They also provide extensive references to literature in the field. This new edition of Development Macroeco¬ nomics is the ¡deal introduction for students and an indispensable resource for researchers. К Fully updated and expanded E Provides the most comprehensive treat¬ ment of the macroeconomics of developing nations E Features new material on fiscal discipline, monetary policy regimes, currency and banking crises — and much more m Includes extensive references В Serves both as a graduate textbook and a resource for researchers
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author Agénor, Pierre-Richard 1957-
Montiel, Peter 1951-
author_GND (DE-588)12408009X
(DE-588)122247183
author_facet Agénor, Pierre-Richard 1957-
Montiel, Peter 1951-
author_role aut
aut
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p m pm
building Verbundindex
bvnumber BV035056424
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callnumber-raw HC59.7
callnumber-search HC59.7
callnumber-sort HC 259.7
callnumber-subject HC - Economic History and Conditions
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discipline_str_mv Wirtschaftswissenschaften
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geographic Developing countries Economic conditions
Entwicklungsländer (DE-588)4014954-7 gnd
geographic_facet Developing countries Economic conditions
Entwicklungsländer
id DE-604.BV035056424
illustrated Illustrated
index_date 2024-07-02T21:58:43Z
indexdate 2024-07-09T21:21:12Z
institution BVB
isbn 9780691130903
language English
oai_aleph_id oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016725010
oclc_num 173809138
open_access_boolean
owner DE-703
DE-521
DE-M382
DE-11
DE-188
DE-29
DE-739
DE-523
owner_facet DE-703
DE-521
DE-M382
DE-11
DE-188
DE-29
DE-739
DE-523
physical XX, 787 S. graph. Darst.
publishDate 2008
publishDateSearch 2008
publishDateSort 2008
publisher Princeton Univ. Press
record_format marc
spelling Agénor, Pierre-Richard 1957- Verfasser (DE-588)12408009X aut
Development macroeconomics Pierre-Richard Agénor and Peter J. Montiel
3. ed.
Princeton, NJ [u.a.] Princeton Univ. Press 2008
XX, 787 S. graph. Darst.
txt rdacontent
n rdamedia
nc rdacarrier
Includes bibliographical references (p. 699-750) and index
Entwicklungsländer
Wirtschaft
Development economics
Macroeconomics
Entwicklungspolitik (DE-588)4014957-2 gnd rswk-swf
Entwicklungsökonomie (DE-588)4213090-6 gnd rswk-swf
Wirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4066493-4 gnd rswk-swf
Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd rswk-swf
Entwicklungstheorie (DE-588)4121207-1 gnd rswk-swf
Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 gnd rswk-swf
Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 gnd rswk-swf
Developing countries Economic conditions
Entwicklungsländer (DE-588)4014954-7 gnd rswk-swf
Entwicklungstheorie (DE-588)4121207-1 s
Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 s
DE-604
Entwicklungspolitik (DE-588)4014957-2 s
Entwicklungsländer (DE-588)4014954-7 g
Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 s
Wirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4066493-4 s
Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 s
DE-188
Entwicklungsökonomie (DE-588)4213090-6 s
Montiel, Peter 1951- Verfasser (DE-588)122247183 aut
SWB Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016725010&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis
Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016725010&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext
spellingShingle Agénor, Pierre-Richard 1957-
Montiel, Peter 1951-
Development macroeconomics
Entwicklungsländer
Wirtschaft
Development economics
Macroeconomics
Entwicklungspolitik (DE-588)4014957-2 gnd
Entwicklungsökonomie (DE-588)4213090-6 gnd
Wirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4066493-4 gnd
Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd
Entwicklungstheorie (DE-588)4121207-1 gnd
Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 gnd
Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4014957-2
(DE-588)4213090-6
(DE-588)4066493-4
(DE-588)4037174-8
(DE-588)4121207-1
(DE-588)4114528-8
(DE-588)4066438-7
(DE-588)4014954-7
title Development macroeconomics
title_auth Development macroeconomics
title_exact_search Development macroeconomics
title_exact_search_txtP Development macroeconomics
title_full Development macroeconomics Pierre-Richard Agénor and Peter J. Montiel
title_fullStr Development macroeconomics Pierre-Richard Agénor and Peter J. Montiel
title_full_unstemmed Development macroeconomics Pierre-Richard Agénor and Peter J. Montiel
title_short Development macroeconomics
title_sort development macroeconomics
topic Entwicklungsländer
Wirtschaft
Development economics
Macroeconomics
Entwicklungspolitik (DE-588)4014957-2 gnd
Entwicklungsökonomie (DE-588)4213090-6 gnd
Wirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4066493-4 gnd
Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd
Entwicklungstheorie (DE-588)4121207-1 gnd
Mathematisches Modell (DE-588)4114528-8 gnd
Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 gnd
topic_facet Entwicklungsländer
Wirtschaft
Development economics
Macroeconomics
Entwicklungspolitik
Entwicklungsökonomie
Wirtschaftspolitik
Makroökonomie
Entwicklungstheorie
Mathematisches Modell
Wirtschaftsentwicklung
Developing countries Economic conditions
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016725010&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016725010&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
work_keys_str_mv AT agenorpierrerichard developmentmacroeconomics
AT montielpeter developmentmacroeconomics