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  • Stabi Berlin  (4)
  • SLB Potsdam
  • Collegium Polonicum
  • Berlin VÖBB/ZLB
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  • SB Fürstenwalde
  • GB Schöneiche
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  • 2010-2014  (4)
  • 2012  (4)
  • Portillo, Rafael  (4)
  • Open access  (4)
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  • Stabi Berlin  (4)
  • SLB Potsdam
  • Collegium Polonicum
  • Berlin VÖBB/ZLB
  • Landesgeschichtliche Vereinigung
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  • 2010-2014  (4)
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  • Open access  (4)
  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_845822497
    Format: Online-Ressource (48 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    ISBN: 1475535562 , 9781475535563
    Series Statement: IMF Working Papers Working Paper No. 12/274
    Content: Natural resource revenues provide a valuable source to finance public investment in developing countries, which frequently face borrowing constraints and tax revenue mobilization problems. This paper develops a dynamic stochastic small open economy model to analyze the macroeconomic effects of investing natural resource revenues, making explicit the role of pervasive features in these countries including public investment inefficiency, absorptive capacity constraints, Dutch disease, and financing needs to sustain capital. Revenue exhaustibility raises medium-term issues of how to sustain capital built during a windfall, while revenue volatility raises short-term concerns about macroeconomic instability. Using the model, country applications show how combining public investment with a resource fund---a sustainable investing approach---can help address the macroeconomic problems associated with both exhaustibility and volatility. The applications also demonstrate how the model can be used to determine the appropriate magnitude of the investment scaling-up (accounting for the financing needs to sustain capital) and the adequate size of a stabilization fund (buffer)
    Language: English
    Keywords: Graue Literatur
    URL: Volltext  (IMF e-Library)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_845831410
    Format: Online-Ressource (54 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    ISBN: 1475504071 , 9781475504071
    Series Statement: IMF Working Papers Working Paper No. 12/144
    Content: We develop a model to study the macroeconomic effects of public investment surges in low-income countries, making explicit: (i) the investment-growth linkages; (ii) public external and domestic debt accumulation; (iii) the fiscal policy reactions necessary to ensure debt-sustainability; and (iv) the macroeconomic adjustment required to ensure internal and external balance. Well-executed high-yielding public investment programs can substantially raise output and consumption and be self-financing in the long run. However, even if the long run looks good, transition problems can be formidable when concessional financing does not cover the full cost of the investment program. Covering the resulting gap with tax increases or spending cuts requires sharp macroeconomic adjustments, crowding out private investment and consumption and delaying the growth benefits of public investment. Covering the gap with domestic borrowing market is not helpful either: higher domestic rates increase the financing challenge and private investment and consumption are still crowded out. Supplementing with external commercial borrowing, on the other hand, can smooth these difficult adjustments, reconciling the scaling up with feasibility constraints on increases in tax rates. But the strategy may be also risky. With poor execution, sluggish fiscal policy reactions, or persistent negative exogenous shocks, this strategy can easily lead to unsustainable public debt dynamics. Front-loaded investment programs and weak structural conditions (such as low returns to public capital and poor execution of investments) make the fiscal adjustment more challenging and the risks greater
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (IMF e-Library)
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_84583357X
    Format: Online-Ressource (47 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    ISBN: 1475502842 , 9781475502848
    Series Statement: IMF Working Papers Working Paper No. 12/94
    Content: We develop a DSGE model with a banking sector to analyze the impact of the financial crisis on Zambia and the role of the monetary policy response. We view the crisis as a combination of three related shocks: a worsening in the terms of the trade, an increase in the country’s risk premium, and a decrease in the risk appetite of local banks. We characterize monetary policy as ""stop and go"": initially tight, subsequently loose. Simulations of the model broadly match the path of the economy during this period. We find that the initial policy response contributed to the domestic impact of the crisis by further tightening financial conditions. We study the factors driving the ""stop"" part of policy and derive policy implications for central banks in low-income countries
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (IMF e-Library)
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_845837486
    Format: Online-Ressource (75 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    ISBN: 161635237X , 9781616352370
    Content: The pace of progress toward achievement of the Millenium Development Goals (MDG) in many sub-Saharan African countries remains too slow to reach targets by 2015, despite significant progress in the late 1990s. The MDG Africa Steering Group, convened in September 2007 by the UN Secretary-General, designated 10 countries for pilot studies to investigate how existing national development plans would be impacted by scaled up development aid to Africa. This joint publication of the IMF and the United Nations Development Programme reports conclusions drawn from these pilot studies and summarizes country-specific results for Benin, the Central African Republic, Ghana, Liberia, Niger, Rwanda, Tanzania, Togo, Sierra Leone, and Zambia
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (IMF e-Library)
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