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Managing economic volatility and crises: a practitioner's guide

Aizenman, Joshua(Edited by)Pinto, Brian(Edited by)
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Economic volatility has come into its own after being treated for decades as a secondary phenomenon in the business cycle literature.

This evolution has been driven by the recognition that non-linearities, long buried by the economist's penchant for linearity, magnify the negative effects of volatility on long-run growth and inequality, especially in poor countries.

This 2006 collection organizes empirical and policy results for economists and development policy practitioners into four parts: basic features, including the impact of volatility on growth and poverty; commodity price volatility; the financial sector's dual role as an absorber and amplifier of shocks; and the management and prevention of macroeconomic crises.

The latter section includes a cross-country study, case studies on Argentina and Russia, and lessons from the debt default episodes of the 1980s and 1990s.

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£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107155290 / 9781107155299
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
338.542
03/10/2005
England
English
567 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%