Resource abundance: A curse or blessing?
Aid Volatility and Dutch Disease: Is There a Role for Macroeconomic Policies? Prepared by Alessandro Prati and Thierry Tressel 1 June 2006 Abstract This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed in this Working Paper are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent.
Dutch Disease story was right, the post-1980 story should have been one of greater growth. Hence, the story as such does not fit the facts. 3 Alternatively, it may wan t to d iv ersify in o resource-intensive n ustrial zat on, wh ch has fail d in many countries, Auty (1990) 5.
Argumentative Essay Educational ReformSince the early 1980's, the issue of America's faltering public schoolsystem has become a serious concern. The crisis in K-12 education is one of thebiggest challenges facing the nation. There is a great deal of evidence to showthis problem.
Aid effectiveness is the effectiveness of development aid in achieving economic or human development (or development targets). Following the Cold War in the late 1990s, donor governments and aid agencies began to realize that their many different approaches and requirements for conditioning aid were imposing huge costs on developing countries and making aid less effective.
Demystifying Dutch Disease. Naoko C. Kojo. 1. Keywords: Dutch disease, Natural resources, International capital flows, Remittances, Aid. JEL Codes: Q33, F14, F11. 1 I am grateful to Julia Oliver who undertook the review of World Bank country documents. Inputs were also provided by Dobrina Gogova.
Sauna in the Dutch language area. This article is written like a personal reflection, personal essay, or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor's personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic. Philosophers developed new ideas about nature and doctors noticed the connection between lack of hygiene and disease.
A V Rajwade This article discusses whether capital account convertibility can or should be an objective or a means towards achieving more fundamental macroeconomic goals. It presents an overview of the risks and rewards of convertibility and debates the issue of freely floating versus managed exchange rates and their implications for a developing economy.