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North–South Linkages and International Macroeconomic Policy

This book provides a useful overview of the flourishing research area relating to interactions between North and South.

David Vines (Author), David Currie (Author)

9780521142649, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 10 June 2010

432 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.4 cm, 0.63 kg

Researchers have begun to apply economic techniques initially developed to analyse the industrialised countries to analyse North-South interactions in the world economy. This volume, derived from a CEPR conference, brings together theoretical and empirical papers on fiscal, monetary and trade linkages between the North and South. The papers use the advances in the use of the major macroeconomic models to simulate global and inter-regional interactions, and to analyse the implications for the South of macroeconomic developments in the North. They also examine international policy questions in a genuinely global context, and consider the design of policy packages for the Third World (aid versus trade, growth-oriented adjustment) in an empirical context. This volume provides a useful overview of the flourishing research area relating to interactions between North and South, and highlights areas where future research is needed.

List of figures
List of tables
Preface
List of conference participants
1. North-South linkages and international macroeconomic policy: an overview David Vines and David Currie
Part I. Trade Linkages: The Elasticities Debate: 2. NIE export performance revisited: the estimation of export demand elasticities, and the role of product differentiation and growth Vito Antonio Muscatelli
3. Export growth and the terms of trade: the case of the curious elasticities James Riedel and PREMACHANDRA ATHUKORALA
Part II. Trade Linkages: Commodities: 4. Economic activity and commodity prices: theory and evidence Annalasia Cristini
Discussion Vito Antonio Muscatelli
Part III. Convergence and Growth Linkages: 5. Convergence and growth linkages between North and South John F. Helliwell and Alan Chung
Discussion Fabrizio Zilibotti
Part IV. Open Economy Macro and Adjustment in the South: 6. Analysing external adjustment in developing counties: a macroeconomic framework Chris Allen, T. G. Srinivasan and David Vines
7. Dynamic response to external shocks in Classical and Keynesian economies Klaus Schmidt-Hebbel and Luis Serven
Discussion David Currie
Part V. Global Scenarios: 8. Macroeconomic effects on developing countries of shocks in the OECD: evidence from multicountry models Ralph C. Bryant and Warwick J. McKibbin
9. Macroeconomic linkages between the OECD and the Asia-Pacific region Warwick J. McKibbin and Mark W. Sundberg
10. MULTIMOD simulations of the effects on developing countries of decreasing military spending Tamim Bayoumi, Daniel Hewitt and Steven Symansky
11. Effects of a rise in G-7 real interest rates on developing countries Christian E. Petersen and T. G. Srinivasan
12. Quantifying North–South interdependencies with MCM simulation Jaime Marquez
Discussion Beatriz Armendariz de Aghion
13. The consequences of US fiscal actions in a global model with alternative assumptions about the exchange regime in developing countries Ralph C. Bryant and Charles Chukwuma Soludo
Index.

Subject Areas: Macroeconomics [KCB]

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