Development

Created
Tue, 18/04/2023 - 07:32

Martín Guzmán, ex ministro de Economía de Argentina, explica cómo el rol del poder debe ser central en la investigación económica, especialmente cuando se trata de deuda soberana.

Más de la mitad de todos los países en desarrollo del mundo están actualmente en crisis de deuda o se dirigen hacia ella.

La gente está despertando para descubrir que otra crisis de deuda internacional de enormes proporciones se avecina en el horizonte a una escala no vista desde principios de la década de 1980, después de la cual América Latina y África sufrieron una "década perdida". Implosiones de esta magnitud pueden eliminar años de progreso en salud, educación y estabilidad social. Sin embargo, no muchas personas entienden por qué y cómo está sucediendo esto.

Created
Tue, 14/03/2023 - 02:44

A model that captures key vulnerabilities and structural weaknesses of developing countries' trade and production structures.

Our new INET working paper began as a background study for UNCTAD’s Trade and Development Report 2022. Since then, the world has evolved, but this essay has the same purpose as the original: To assess from the perspective of the Balance of Payments Constrained Growth (BPCG) model, the key current challenges to developing countries that spring from two broad types of factors they cannot control. These are, first, global shocks that affect the world economy at large and, second, major macro or trade policy changes in developed countries. The BPCG perspective helps to identify to what extent these challenges are rooted in or conditioned by the developing countries' financial vulnerabilities and structural weaknesses linked to their roles in international trade and capital markets.

Created
Wed, 15/03/2023 - 01:36

Vera Songwe, Chair of the Liquidity and Sustainability Facility, and former Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa, on the multiple crises facing African countries.

Songwe is co-chair of the Independent High-Level Expert Group on Finance for Climate Action, a member of the Global Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ), and a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. Songwe was previously Under-Secretary-General at the United Nations and Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. Recognized as one of Africa’s 100 most influential people in 2022 and recipient of the All Africa Continental Leadership Award, Songwe was named one of the nominees for Forbes Africa 50 Top Women in 2023. She recently co-authored a book entitled Regional Integration in West Africa: Is There a Role for a Single Currency? She has spent the last three years championing the cause for additional liquidity for emerging markets and the need for a new global financial architecture fit for the 21st century’s development challenges.

Created
Tue, 28/02/2023 - 03:45

Honorary Vice President at IMANI Center for policy and education, Bright Simons, on the challenges Ghana is facing

Bright Simons is honorary Vice President at IMANI Center for policy and education, a think tank dedicated to policy and research on rule of law, market growth and development, individual rights, and human security and institutional development. He previously served on the World Economic Forum's Africa Strategy Group.

Created
Tue, 07/02/2023 - 09:48

How can we quantify the wage share implied by varying degrees and types of participation to Global Value Chains?

A stable labor share has long been a stylized fact of advanced capitalist development (Kaldor, 1961). A key premise was that productivity increases would accrue to labor through real wage increases, which would tend to hold constant the share of wages in net output.

Created
Tue, 23/08/2022 - 06:34
China’s successful technological development path stands in contrast to the corporate financialization model in the United States

In our INET working paper, "China’s Development Path,” we employ the “social conditions of innovative enterprise” framework to analyze the key determinants of China’s development path from the economic reforms of 1978 to the present. First, we focus on how government investments in human capabilities and physical infrastructure provided foundational support for the emergence of Chinese enterprises capable of technological learning.