Archives

Topic: Development economics

  1. External Stability, Real Exchange Rate Adjustment and the Exchange Rate Regime in Emerging-Market Economies

    Discussion Paper 2011-5 - Olivier Gervais, Lawrence Schembri, Lena Suchanek

    In emerging-market economies, real exchange rate adjustment is critical for maintaining a sustainable current account position and thereby for helping to reduce macroeconomic and financial instability.

    Topic: Development economics; Exchange rate regimes; International topics
  2. The Evolution of Capital Flows to Emerging-Market Economies

    Many emerging-market economies (EMEs) have significantly improved their macroeconomic fundamentals and undergone structural reforms since the Asian crisis. These developments have enhanced the composition of capital flows to EMEs through an improved debt structure, a larger share of capital flows as foreign direct investment, and greater access to international debt markets for corporations in EMEs. Structural changes in the global financial landscape have also increased capital flows, bringing economic and financial benefits to EMEs. During the recent financial crisis, however, the opening up of capital accounts and increased financial and trade linkages left many countries vulnerable to external disruptions. Countries with sound fundamentals have weathered the crisis relatively well. Policy-makers in EMEs need to implement policies that support capital flows and ensure that controls imposed to deal with detrimental outflows during periods of stress or rapid inflows are only temporary.

    Topic: Development economics; Financial markets; Financial system regulation and policies
  3. India and the Global Demand for Commodities: Is There an Elephant in the Room?

    Discussion Paper 2008-18 - Michael Francis, Corinne Luu

    After 10 years of impressive growth, India is now the fourth largest economy in the world. Yet, to date, India's impact on global commodity markets has been muted. The authors examine how India's domestic and trade policies have distorted and constrained its demand for commodities.

    Topic: Development economics; International topics
  4. Good Policies or Good Fortune: What Drives the Compression in Emerging Market Spreads?

    Working Paper 2008-25 - Philipp Maier, Garima Vasishtha

    Since 2002, spreads on emerging market sovereign debt have fallen to historical lows. Given the close links between sovereign spreads, capital flows to emerging markets, and economic growth, understanding the factors driving these spreads is very important. We address this issue in two stages.

    Topic: Development economics; Financial stability; International topics
  5. Exchange Rate Regimes, Globalisation, and the Cost of Capital in Emerging Markets

    Working Paper 2007-29 - Antonio Diez de los Rios

    This paper presents a multifactor asset pricing model for currency, bond, and stock returns for ten emerging markets to investigate the effect of the exchange rate regime on the cost of capital and the integration of emerging financial markets. Since there is evidence that a fixed exchange rate regime reduces the currency risk premia demanded by foreign investors, the tentative conclusion is that a fixed exchange rate regime system can help reduce the cost of capital in emerging markets.

    Topic: Development economics; Exchange rate regimes
  6. Institutional Quality, Trade, and the Changing Distribution of World Income

    Working Paper 2006-19 - Brigitte Desroches, Michael Francis

    Conventional wisdom holds that institutional changes and trade liberalization are two main sources of growth in per capita income around the world.

    Topic: Development economics; International topics
  7. The Institutional and Political Determinants of Fiscal Adjustment

    Working Paper 2006-1 - Robert Lavigne

    The author empirically assesses the effects of institutional and political factors on the need and willingness of governments to make large fiscal adjustments.

    Topic: Development economics; Econometric and statistical methods; Fiscal Policy; International topics
  8. Understanding China's Long-Run Growth Process and Its Implications for Canada

    In the past 25 years, China has introduced numerous reforms, gradually moving from a centrally planned economy towards a socialist market economy capable of robust and sustainable economic growth. China's increasing integration into the global economy, which has been fuelled by this recent and rapid economic growth, has already begun to affect the economies of other countries and to present challenges for policy-makers, both in China and abroad. In addition to examining the determinants of China's past and current growth, the authors consider factors that are likely to support continued growth in the future and assess the implications for both the world and the Canadian economies.

    Topic: Development economics; International topics
  9. Summary of the G-20 Workshop on Developing Strong Domestic Financial Markets, 26-27 April 2004

    G-20 representatives, academics, market participants, and members of international financial institutions were brought together in Ottawa to explore the connection between robust financial markets and economic growth and development, share experiences, and to develop policy recommendations, where possible. Participants identified several areas they deemed critical for fostering strong domestic financial markets and reducing external vulnerability: sound macroeconomics policies, strengthened financial infrastructures and banking systems, and exchange rate flexibility for countries with widely open capital accounts. Papers presented in the six sessions and keynote address highlighted a number of issues, including currency mismatches, the sequence of financial liberalization and supervisory reforms, the development of local financial markets, infrastructure building and governance, and appropriate incentives.

    Topic: Development economics; Financial Institutions; International topics
  10. Commodity-Linked Bonds: A Potential Means for Less-Developed Countries to Raise Foreign Capital

    Working Paper 2004-20 - Joseph Atta-Mensah

    The author suggests that commodity-linked bonds could provide a potential means for less-developed countries (LDCs) to raise money on the international capital markets, rather than through standard forms of financing.

    Topic: Development economics; Financial markets; International topics
  11. Financial Constraints and Investment: Assessing the Impact of a World Bank Loan Program on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Sri Lanka

    Working Paper 2003-37 - Varouj Aivazian, Dipak Mazumdar, Eric Santor

    The authors examine the investment behaviour of a sample of small, credit-constrained firms in Sri Lanka. Using a unique panel-data set, they analyze and compare the activities of two groups of small firms distinguished by their different access to financing; one group consists of firms with heavily subsidized loans from the World Bank, and the other consists of firms without such subsidies.

    Topic: Development economics
  12. Do Peer Group Members Outperform Individual Borrowers? A Test of Peer Group Lending Using Canadian Micro-Credit Data

    Working Paper 2003-33 - Rafael Gomez, Eric Santor

    Microfinance institutions now serve over 10 million poor households in the developing and developed world, and much of their success has been attributed to their innovative use of peer group lending. There is very little empirical evidence, however, to suggest that group lending schemes offer a superior institutional design over lending programs that serve individual borrowers.

    Topic: Development economics
  13. Exchange Rate Regimes in Emerging Markets

    A series of major international financial crises in the 1990s, and the recent introduction of the euro, have renewed interest in alternative exchange rate systems. The choice of exchange rate regime is particularly relevant for emerging-market countries because other countries are perceived either as having no alternative to their current exchange rate arrangement or as highly unlikely to change.

    This article examines the evolution of exchange rate regimes in emerging markets over the past decade and compares the strengths and weaknesses of the various available systems. These include intermediate regimes, such as the adjustable pegged exchange rate popular throughout much of the post—war period, and the two extreme exchange rate regimes: permanently fixed or freely floating exchange rate regimes. Two recently proposed alternatives are also evaluated: the Managed Floating Plus and Baskets, Bands, and Crawling Pegs. Both try to combine the best elements of the flexible and fixed exchange rate systems, but the Managed Floating Plus is deemed to be the more promising alternative.

    Topic: Development economics; Exchange rate regimes
  14. Financial Structure and Economic Growth: A Non-Technical Survey

    Working Paper 2002-24 - Veronika Dolar, Césaire Meh

    There is a large body of literature that studies the relationship between financial structure (that is, the degree to which the financial system is either market- or intermediary-based) and long-run economic growth.

    Topic: Development economics; Economic models; Financial Institutions; Financial markets; Financial services
  15. Private Capital Flows to Emerging-Market Economies

    This article explores the evolution of capital flows to emerging markets over the last 30 years with emphasis on the past decade. Capital markets in emerging-market economies have evolved substantially over the period, becoming increasingly deep and resilient.

    The author looks at how capital flows to these countries have changed in terms of magnitude, geographical distribution, the financial instruments used, and the country of origin. He also examines how changes in the investor base have affected these flows and reviews the factors underlying the growth of private capital flows in the 1990s.

    Topic: Development economics
  16. Food Aid Delivery, Food Security and Aggregate Welfare in a Small Open Economy: Theory and Evidence

    Working Paper 1998-1 - Patrick Osakwe

    A small-open-economy model is developed to examine how the method of food aid disbursement affects labor employment, food security and aggregate welfare, in recipient countries, in an environment in which private sector firms pay efficiency wages to induce effort. Two forms of food aid delivery are considered: first is project food aid, under which food [...]

    Topic: Development economics
Copyright © 1995 - 2012, Bank of Canada. Terms of Use.