Aid, Growth, And Real Exchange Rate Dynamics / Shantayanan Devarajan, Delfin S. Go, John Page, Sherman Robinson, and Karen Thierfelder

Devarajan, Go, Page, Robinson, and Thierfelder argued that if aid is about the future and recipients are able to plan consumption and investment decisions optimally over time, then the potential problem of an aid-induced appreciation of the real exchange rate (Dutch disease) does not occur. In their...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors:Devarajan, Shantayanan, 1954- (Verfasser)
Other Authors:Go, Delfin S. (Verfasser)
Page, John (Verfasser)
Thierfelder, Karen E. (Verfasser)
Robinson, Sherman (Verfasser)
Format: Online-Resource
Language:English
Published:Washington, D.C : The World Bank, 2008
Series:Policy research working paper
Subjects:
Online Access:kostenfrei
Details
Summary:Devarajan, Go, Page, Robinson, and Thierfelder argued that if aid is about the future and recipients are able to plan consumption and investment decisions optimally over time, then the potential problem of an aid-induced appreciation of the real exchange rate (Dutch disease) does not occur. In their paper, "Aid, Growth and Real Exchange Rate Dynamics," this key result is derived without requiring extreme assumptions or additional productivity story. The economic framework is a standard neoclassical growth model, based on the familiar Salter-Swan characterization of an open economy, with full dynamic savings and investment decisions. It does require that the model is fully dynamic in both savings and investment decisions. An important assumption is that aid should be predictable for intertemporal smoothing to take place. If aid volatility forces recipients to be constrained and myopic, Dutch disease problems become an issue
Physical Description:1 Online-Ressource (42 Seiten)