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Managing Volatility and Crises: A Practitioner's Guide Overview

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In this article, a practical volume on managing volatility and crises is presented, with a focus on the management and prevention of macroeconomic crises, including a cross-country study, lessons from the debt defaults of the 1980s and 1990s and case studies on Argentina and Russia.
Abstract:Ā 
This overview introduces and summarizes the findings of a practical volume on managing volatility and crises. The interest in these topics stems from the growing recognition that non-linearities tend to magnify the impact of economic volatility, leading to large output and economic growth costs, especially in poor countries. In these circumstances, good times do not offset the negative impact of bad times, leading to permanent negative effects. Such asymmetry is often reinforced by incomplete markets, sovereign risk, divisive politics, inefficient taxation, procyclical fiscal policy and weak financial market institutions - factors that are more problematic in developing countries. The same fundamental phenomena that make it difficult to cope with volatility also drive crises. Hence, the volume also focuses on the prevention and management of crises. It is a user-friendly compilation of empirical and policy results aimed at development policy practitioners divided into three modules: (i) the basics of volatility and its impact on growth and poverty; (ii) managing volatility along thematic lines, including financial sector and commodity price volatility; and (iii) management and prevention of macroeconomic crises, including a cross-country study, lessons from the debt defaults of the 1980s and 1990s and case studies on Argentina and Russia.

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Financial Development, Financial Fragility, and Growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study the apparent contradiction between two strands of the literature on the effects of financial intermediation on economic activity and find that a positive long-run relationship between financial intermediary and output growth coexists with a mostly negative short run relationship, and further develop an explanation for these contrasting effects by relating them to recent theoretical models.
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Financial development, financial fragility, and growth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the long-run effects of financial intermediation on economic activity and find that a positive long run relationship exists with a negative short-run relationship, and further develop an explanation for these contrasting effects by relating them to recent theoretical models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Commodity Price Volatility and the Sources of Growth

TL;DR: This article studied the impact of the level and volatility of commodity terms of trade on economic growth, as well as on the three main growth channels: total factor productivity, physical capital accumulation, and human capital acquisition.
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The Long-Run Volatility Puzzle of the Real Exchange Rate

TL;DR: This article showed that the real exchange rate of developing countries is approximately three times more volatile than that of industrial countries and that the difference in volatility can be explained by the fact that developing countries face larger shocks (both real and nominal) and recurrent currency crises or by different elasticities to these shocks.
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Trends in Private Investment in Developin Countries. Statistics for 1970-95

L Bouton, +1 more
- 01 JanĀ 1996Ā -Ā 
TL;DR: In 1995, private investment in developing countries continued its 10-year upward trand. This trend reflects the increasing role played by market forces in developing country as mentioned in this paper. But this trend may not be sustainable.
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Book

Investment Under Uncertainty

TL;DR: In this article, Dixit and Pindyck provide the first detailed exposition of a new theoretical approach to the capital investment decisions of firms, stressing the irreversibility of most investment decisions, and the ongoing uncertainty of the economic environment in which these decisions are made.
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Risk, Uncertainty and Profit

TL;DR: In Risk, Uncertainty and Profit, Frank Knight explored the riddle of profitability in a competitive market profit should not be possible under competitive conditions, as the entry of new entrepreneurs would drive prices down and nullify margins, however evidence abounds of competitive yet profitable markets as mentioned in this paper.
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The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else

TL;DR: The Mystery of Capital as discussed by the authors is one of the most influential books in the history of the world, and it has already led the cognoscenti to put him in the pantheon of great progressive intellectuals of our age.
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Agency Costs, Net Worth, And Business Fluctuations

TL;DR: The authors constructs a simple neoclassical model of intrinsic business cycle dynamics in which borrowers' balance sheet positions play an important role and shows that the agency costs of undertaking physical investments are inversely related to the entrepreneur's/borrower's net worth.
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