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Trade Shocks in Developing Countries: Volume II: Asia and Latin America Paul Collier (Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, St Anthony's College, Oxford)

Trade Shocks in Developing Countries: Volume II: Asia and Latin America By Paul Collier (Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, St Anthony's College, Oxford)

Summary

The second volume of a comparative study of trade shocks covering 23 countries. This volume examines Asia and Latin America, and challenges common generalizations. Trade shocks are shown to lead to high savings rates, though policy errors often mean windfalls lead to a reduction in output.

Trade Shocks in Developing Countries: Volume II: Asia and Latin America Summary

Trade Shocks in Developing Countries: Volume II: Asia and Latin America by Paul Collier (Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, St Anthony's College, Oxford)

Developing countries frequently experience trade shocks and the policy implications of this have been debated for decades.This important book is Volume 2 of a comparative study covering 23 countries, using a common methodology to estimate the effects of shocks. The conventional wisdom has been that private agents, in particular peasant farmers, could not be trusted to use windfalls wisely. This was, and continues to be, the main rationale for stabilising taxation of export crops. The convention was also that windfalls accruing to the public sector were a bane since governments had low savings rates. The evidence in this definitive study supports neither generalisation. Trade shocks typically lead to high savings rates, irrespective of whether they accrue to private producers or to the government. However, the case studies find substantial policy errors so that windfalls are often not translated efficiently into permanent income increases and indeed often lead to a reduction in output. The studies argue for a drastic revision of the case for government action in response to trade shocks. Volume 1 deals with Africa, Volume 2 with Asia and Latin America.

Table of Contents

1. One Decade of External Coffee Shocks in Colombia, 1975-85 ; 2. Costa Rica: Mismanagement of the Coffee Boom ; 3. Bolivia's Tin and National Gas Crises of 1985-89 ; 4. Dealing with Negative Oil Shocks: The Venezuelan Experience in the 1980s ; 5. The Mexican Oil Boom, 1977-85 ; 6. Thailand: Trade Shocks and Domestic Responses ; 7. Temporary Trade Shocks, Consumption Smoothing, and Economic Adjustment: Sri Lanka, 1973-76 ; 8. The Impact of Temporary Trade Shocks on an Economy in Disequilibrium: The Philippines, 1985-89 ; 9. The Remittance Boom in Bangladesh, 1978-86 ; 10. An Evaluation of the 197985 Petroleum Boom in Malaysia ; 11. Indonesia: Trade Shocks and Construction Booms ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780198294634
9780198294634
0198294638
Trade Shocks in Developing Countries: Volume II: Asia and Latin America by Paul Collier (Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, Director, Centre for the Study of African Economics and Fellow, St Anthony's College, Oxford)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
1999-11-18
370
N/A
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