| Economics
News Articles: March 2003 |
| Welcome to the March set of news articles.
As I write this, war against Iraq has begun and the news is totally dominated
by it - not only by the day-to-day conduct of the war and its direct
effects, but also by the likely consequences over the longer term. Some
of the following economics news articles are directly related to the war
(see items 1, 2, 11 and 12); some indirectly so. But there are plenty of
other articles that relate to the topics you are likely to be studying.
As always, I hope you find them useful and enjoy reading them and answering
the questions. |
|
John Sloman
|
1.
Share prices
2.
Oil prices
3.
Outsourcing and its effects on costs
4.
The benefits of an Economics or Business degree
5.
A rise in the UK national minimum wage
6.
Tackling poverty
7.
What future for government
8.
The Energy White Paper
9.
The use of green taxes and charges
10.
UK unemployment falls
11.
US and UK confidence and investment
12.
The economic aftermath of the war with Iraq
13.
GDP and happiness
14.
Budgetary problems as tax receipts fall
15.
The problem of deflation
16.
The slow death of manufacturing in the UK
17.
Towards a more stable monetary world
18.
Mali reaches completion point under the HIPC scheme
19.
Have IMF policies failed developing countries?
News
Item 1: Share prices
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapter 2 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 1, 2 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 4, 5 |
| |
| There has been a lot of volatility
in share prices over the past four weeks. Share prices fell by over 10
per cent in three-week period to 12 March, only to rise again by nearly
15 per cent over the following week. The price of shares has been driven
largely by expectations; and with uncertainty about war and its consequences,
share prices have reflected this uncertainty and the swings between pessimism
and optimism for the future of the world economy, the price of oil and
the prospects for business. The following articles look at why share prices
have behaved the way they have. The final article looks at the practice
of 'short-selling' and its effect on share prices. |
UK
shares drop 2% BBC News Online (25/2/03)
Shares post
strong gains BBC News Online (21/3/03)
Don't
shoot the messenger The Economist (27/2/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
Using supply and demand
analysis, explain why shares (a) dropped in late February; (b) rose as
war drew close and then began. |
| 2. |
Explain what is meant
by 'short-selling' and the direct influence it has on share prices in (a)
a falling ('bear') market; (b) a rising ('bull') market. |
| 3. |
Under what circumstances
is speculation on stock markets likely to (a) increase share price fluctuations;
(b) reduce such fluctuations? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 2: Oil prices
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapter 2 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 1, 2 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 4, 5 |
| |
| Weeks of uncertainty about whether
there would be a war against Iraq had seen oil prices soar to around $35
to $40 per barrel. The advent of the war, however, and the hope that it
might be swiftly over then sent oil prices plummeting by nearly 25 per
cent. What are the causes of these fluctuations and what determined their
magnitude? The following two articles look at the evidence. |
Oil
price dips as war nears BBC News Online (18/3/03)
Oil
slides as troops secure key Iraq oil port Reuters (21/3/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
Using supply and demand
analysis, explain why oil prices first rose and then fell. |
| 2. |
What determined the magnitude
of these fluctuations? Distinguish between shifts in the curves and the
elasticity of demand and supply in explaining what happened. |
| 3. |
Find out and explain what
has happened to oil prices since these two articles were written |
Go back to contents
News
Item 3: Outsourcing and its effects on costs
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapters 5, 7, 8 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 3, 4 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 3, 9, 12, 14, 15,
23 |
| |
| It is common nowadays for companies
to buy many of their products and services on contract from specialist
suppliers, rather than producing them in-house. This, it is argued, saves
them money by simplifying their operations and by drawing on expertise
and efficiency developed in the specialist companies. The following article,
taken from Asia Times Online of 12 March 2003, looks at the growth
in this practice in Asia and considers its effects on business. |
Outsourcing:
Asia cashes in
| Questions |
| 1. |
In what ways may outsourcing
help to reduce a firm's costs? |
| 2. |
Do cost savings from outsourcing
suggest that many firms are suffering from diseconomies of scale? |
| 3. |
What effects does outsourcing
have on the degree of competition in a given industry? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 4: The benefits of an Economics or Business degree
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapter 9 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 5 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 17, 18 |
| |
| Will you earn more by gaining an economics
degree than a degree in some other subject? With the exception of law and
possibly medicine, the answer would seem to be yes! The following article,
taken from BBC Online of 6 March 2003, examines evidence from the
Labour Force Survey appearing in the March 2003 edition of Labour Market
Trends (see the second link). The evidence also shows that students
with arts degrees can expect to earn less than those who quit education
at 18. This is particularly worrying at a time when the UK has announced
plans to allow universities to raise student fees from £1100 to £3000
per year (see January news item 6). But why are different degrees worth
different amounts? The Labour Market Trends article examines the
reasons. |
Arts
degrees 'reduce earnings'
Link
to Labour Market Trends (see pages 46-53 of the pdf file)
| Questions |
| 1. |
What is meant by 'the
financial return to education'? How would you attempt to calculate the
rate of return? |
| 2. |
How can marginal productivity
theory help to explain the findings of the Labour Force Survey and, in
particular, the huge variation in rates of return from different degree
subjects? |
| 3. |
There has been a rapid
expansion in the proportion of school-leavers going on to higher education.
Given this, why has the rate of return from a degree not fallen? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 5: A rise in the UK national minimum wage
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapter 10 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 5 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapter 17 |
| |
| On 19 March the UK government an increase
in the national minimum wage from £4.20 to £4.50 per hour,
to take effect in October. There will be further rise to £4.85 the
following October. The youth minimum wage rate (for those aged 18 to 21)
will go up from £3.60 to £3.80 and then to £4.10 next
year. What effect will this have on employment and the economy? The following
articles examine the possibilities and some of the other issues surrounding
the minimum wage. The fourth article looks at recent evidence on the effects
of the minimum wage on jobs in the residential care homes sector. The evidence
is given in a LSE paper, which you will find by clicking on the final link. |
Minimum
wage to rise to £4.50 Guardian (19/3/03)
Minimum wage
goes up BBC News Online (19/3/03)
Low pay crooks
dodge the law BBC News Online (19/3/03)
Details on DTI site
Minimum
wage cleared over job losses Guardian (24/2/03)
Where the minimum
wage bites hard LSE Centre for Economic Performance
| Questions |
| 1. |
For what reasons may even
a significant rise in the minimum wage fail to eradicate poverty? |
| 2. |
Why, up to now, has the
minimum wage had apparently no adverse effects on unemployment? |
| 3. |
How could firms respond
to a rise in the minimum wage in ways that allowed them to retain their
current level of profits? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 6: Tackling poverty
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapter 10 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 5 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapter 17 |
| |
| The Labour government in the UK has
taken a number of measures to reduce poverty, such as the minimum wage,
the introduction of tax credits and the raising of various other benefits.
But will these have had significant effects on child poverty in particular,
or poverty in general, by the time of the next election (probably in 2005)?
Is poverty something that can be effectively reduced in the short term?
Or can significant and lasting reductions in poverty only be made through
long-term strategies of improved education, housing and various forms of
support for the poor and vulnerable. The second of the linked articles
looks at recent Joseph Rowntree working paper, which focuses on tackling
poverty and disadvantage over a 20-year time scale. You can access the
paper itself by clicking on the third link. |
Child
poverty: it's the delivery test Guardian (3/3/03)
Poverty
will outlast policies Independent (16/3/03)
Tackling
Disadvantage: A 20-year enterprise Joseph Rowntree Foundation
| Questions |
| 1. |
What is the difference
between absolute and relative poverty? (See case study 10.1 in the
student section of the Economics 5th edition section of this site.)
Why is relative poverty harder to eliminate than absolute poverty? |
| 2. |
Compare the relative advantages
and disadvantages of tax credits and child benefit as means of reducing
child poverty. |
| 3. |
What are the six long-term
policy priorities identified in the Joseph Rowntree Foundation paper for
reducing poverty? For what reasons might it be difficult to achieve significant
improvements in these areas, even over a 20-year period? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 7: What future for government
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapters 11, 22 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 6, 10 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 19-21, 30 |
| |
| Does government have a future and
what should that future be? These are the questions asked by the following
article, from the OECD Economic Observer of 29 January 2003. After
the fall of communism and the rise of the political right around the world,
there was a growing belief in the benefits of markets and their superiority
over government in achieving economic objectives. But with growing worries
about the effects of globalisation, world inequalities and increasing environmental
damage, the rush to free markets is under fire from many commentators.
So if governments are to have a major role in economic decision making,
what should that role be? The article examines the arguments. |
What
future for government?
| Questions |
| 1. |
The article begins: "Government
has been on the retreat for the past decade or more. But there are signs
it is staging a comeback. This may be a good thing." Why may it be a good
thing? |
| 2. |
To what extent is the
article arguing for a partnership of government and the market? |
| 3. |
What objectives, other
than economic efficiency, might governments pursue? To what extent might
these conflict with the achievement of economic efficiency? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 8: The Energy White Paper
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapters 11, 12 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 6 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapter 21 |
| |
| On February 24, the UK government
published its Energy White Paper, which proposes, among other things, moving
to cleaner, greener forms of energy. But how easy will this be to achieve,
and is it the only solution to tackling the pollution caused by energy
production and consumption? The following articles examine the arguments. |
Changing
the face of energy BBC News Online (24/2/03)
Five
years for green power to prove its worth Guardian (25/2/03)
How
alternative sources shape up Guardian (25/2/03)
Wind
power blows nuclear industry into the wilderness Independent
(25/2/03)
At
last, the Government fulfils green promises with policy shift on energy
Independent (25/2/03)
Fine
green words - but without a curb on car use, the policy is unsustainable
Independent (25/2/03)
How
to save the planet without too much pain Independent (26/2/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
What are the government's
proposals in the white paper and what are the mechanisms for achieving
them? |
| 2. |
Compare the relative merits
of alternative fuels from the perspectives of private costs and environmental
costs. |
| 3. |
Is a switch to greener
fuels the best long-term solution to problems of global warming and other
forms of pollution from the use of fuels? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 9: The use of green taxes and charges
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapters 11, 12 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 6 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapter 21 |
| |
| Following the apparent success of
the London congestion charge, discussion is now taking place on the possible
use of a national road charging scheme using satellite tracking technology.
Discussion is also taking place about the use of green taxes on aviation
fuel so as to raise the price of air travel to reflect the damage to the
environment that it causes. The following articles look at the debates. |
Congestion
charge success reduces revenue to £9m Independent (18/3/03)
Congestion
charges take their toll on Westminster Telegraph (18/3/03)
£1.30
a mile tolls next for drivers Observer (23/2/03)
Passengers
face 'green tax' on airline fuel Independent (15/3/03)
Airlines
face 75% green tax rise Guardian (15/3/03)
Aviation
and the Environment Treasury and Department of Transport
discussion
document
| Questions |
| 1. |
To what extent has the
London congestion charge been a success so far? |
| 2. |
What are the arguments
for and against a nation-wide road charging scheme using satellite technology,
where the charge would vary according to the degree of congestion? |
| 3. |
Consider the arguments
for and against (a) aviation fuel taxes, (b) taxes on air tickets and (c)
tradable permits for emissions from planes, as alternative means of reducing
atmospheric pollution from aircraft. |
Go back to contents
News
Item 10: UK unemployment falls
| Relevant to: |
Economics (4th
edition), Chapters 13, 16, 21, 22
Economics (5th
edition), Chapters 14, 17, 21, 22 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 7, 8, 10 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 25, 28, 30 |
| |
| The March edition of Labour Market
Trends showed both rising employment and falling unemployment. This
would seem to fly in the face of a slowing economy verging on recession.
The following articles examine the facts and seek to explain this conundrum.
The final link is to Labour Market Trends, where you will find the
statistics in the appendix at the end (see, in particular, the tables in
sections B and C). |
UK
Unemployment HRM Guide (19/3/03)
Jobless
total falls again Ananova (19/3/03)
Sharp drop
in jobless total BBC News Online (19/3/03)
Numbers
that don't add up may mask a UK downturn Independent (20/3/03)
Labour
Market Trends National Statistics
| Questions |
| 1. |
Explain the differences
in recent employment/unemployment trends in the manufacturing and public
sectors of the economy. |
| 2. |
What would be the likely
effects on unemployment of a fall in house prices? |
| 3. |
To what extent can (a)
time lags and (b) movements in the exchange rate explain the recent unemployment
trends? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 11: US and UK confidence and investment
| Relevant to: |
Economics (4th
edition), Chapter 16
Economics (5th
edition), Chapter 17 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 8 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapter 28 |
| |
| Indicators in the US and UK have shown
low levels of consumer and business confidence. Consumer spending has been
slowing and investment falling. The following articles look at the facts.
The final link is to the monthly European Commission Business and Consumer
Survey Results. |
US
confidence hits 10-year low BBC News Online (25/2/03)
Consumer
Confidence Drops to a 9-Year Low New York Times (26/2/03)
War
worries hit business confidence Ananova (10/3/03)
Consumer
boom may be at an end Herald (21/3/03)
UK investment
hits five year low BBC News Online (25/2/03)
Manufacturing
investment slumps Guardian (25/2/03)
No respite
for UK manufacturing BBC News Online (20/3/03)
Business
and Consumer Survey Results, Feb 2003 European
Commission
| Questions |
| 1. |
What have been the causes
of declining business confidence? |
| 2. |
What have been the causes
of declining consumer confidence? |
| 3. |
Explain what is meant
by 'the accelerator'. Is the behaviour of investment over the past few
months consistent with the accelerator? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 12: The economic aftermath of the war with Iraq
| Relevant to: |
Economics (4th
edition), Chapters 16, 18, 19, 20, 24, 25
Economics (5th
edition), Chapters 17-20, 24, 25 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 8, 9, 10, 12 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 25-31 |
| |
| With conflict in Iraq having begun,
many commentators are projecting beyond the war to see what the future
of the world economy is likely to be. The following is a selection of articles,
some written before conflict started and some after. They all try to gauge
what the likely consequences will be. I've arranged them in chronological
order. |
Will
war mean slump? The Economist (26/2/03)
Economy
facing a turn? Washington Times (6/3/03)
The
Case for Optimism Fortune (17/3/03)
The
economic consequences of war Telegraph (19/3/03)
Test
for world economies The Star (Malaysia) (21/3/03)
A
battle for economic survival BBC News Online (21/3/03)
The
economics of war Times Online (21/3/03)
We
may have been too quick to assume more of the same Sydney Morning
Herald (22/3/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
Why may it be "mistaken
to assume that all will be well (for the world economy) once war is over"? |
| 2. |
Why might the US economy
be expected to "grow a lot faster than Japan's or the European Union's"?
What are the arguments against this happening? |
| 3. |
What are the likely direct
and longer-term effects of the war on (a) share prices, (b) the value of
the US dollar and (c) interest rates? Why is it very difficult to forecast
these? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 13: GDP and happiness
| Relevant to: |
Economics (4th
edition), Chapters 1, 4, 14, 22
Economics (5th
edition), Chapters 1, 4, 13, 22 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 7, 10 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 6, 25, 30 |
| |
| In most years countries experience
economic growth. Does that mean, however, that human welfare or happiness
is growing? One correction that has to be made is for inflation. But for
that to be accurately accounted for, a 'basket' of goods has to be identified
when working out the price index. This month has seen various items added
to this basket and various ones eliminated. The first of the following
articles looks at the changing composition of this basket. But, even with
a changed basket, does GDP growth give any real indication of standards
of living or, more simply, of human happiness? The other articles explore
this question. |
Brown
ale makes way for latte BBC News Online (17/3/03)
Low
inflation? So why are Britons not feeling better off? Independent
(18/3/03)
A
different view of euro-sclerosis Financial Times (28/2/03)
Money
and happiness Guardian (7/3/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
Explain how a basket of
goods is used to work out the price index. |
| 2. |
Why, "if you are a struggling
single mother in the North-east who buys only discount clothes, [is] your
inflation much lower than if you are buying services in an expensive city
such as London"? |
| 3. |
Why may US and eurozone
GDP statistics give a poor indication of the relative standards of living
in these two parts of the world? |
| 4. |
Why may the pursuit of 'economic' growth not
lead to an increase in happiness? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 14: Budgetary problems as tax receipts fall
| Relevant to: |
Economics (4th
edition), Chapter 17
Economics (5th
edition), Chapter 20 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 8 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 28, 29 |
| |
| "Tax receipts have plunged at the
fastest rate for a decade." Thus begins the first of the following two
linked articles from the Independent of 21 March 2003. Why has this
happened and what are the implications for fiscal policy? The articles
examine these questions. (Only the first of the three parts of the second
article is relevant.) |
Blow
to Brown as tax receipts plunge
Chancellor's
luck running dry as tax revenues take a dive
| Questions |
| 1. |
Why has the UK Budget
deficit increased substantially over the past few months? |
| 2. |
Should the government
simply borrow to finance the rising deficit, or should it try to reduce
the deficit? |
| 3. |
What should the Bank of
England do about interest rates under such circumstances? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 15: The problem of deflation
| Relevant to: |
Economics (4th
edition), Chapter 17
Economics (5th
edition), Chapter 20 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 8 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 28, 29 |
| |
| Japan has been in recession for much
of the past decade with price levels falling in some of the years. It seems
unable to pull out of this deflationary bind. Other countries, as they
face recession or the prospect of recession, are worried that they too
will fall into a deflationary trap. The following articles look at the
problem of deflation and the likely policy responses. Evidence from the
Bank of England, however, suggests that deflation will not be a problem
for the UK (see the final article). In a speech by Kate Barker of the Bank
of England's Monetary Policy Committee, however, she suggests that, having
achieved low inflation, the policy objectives must now be broadened. Click
on the link below to access the speech. |
Rate
cuts can help cure economic ills, but are not a magic bullet Independent
(6/3/03)
Japan. Wanted:
An anti-deflation man (or woman) Asia Times Online (22/2/03)
Deflation
risk low, Bank of England says Times Online (21/3/03)
Bank rejects
deflation risk BBC News Online (21/3/03)
Adjusting
to low inflation: issues for policy (Speech by Kate Barker, Bank
of England)
Bank of England
paper
| Questions |
| 1. |
Why has Japan found it
so difficult to break out of its deflationary trap? |
| 2. |
How can real interest
rates in Germany be higher than in other eurozone countries, given that
the ECB sets the same interest rate for all eurozone countries? |
| 3. |
Is Germany likely to "follow
Japan and slip into deflation"? Would cutting interest rates be the best
policy for the eurozone? |
| 4. |
Why is there a low risk of deflation in the UK? |
| 5. |
Why may targeting the rate of inflation be too
simple and rigid a policy objective? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 16: The slow death of manufacturing in the UK
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapters 22, 23 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 10, 11 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 1, 22, 30 |
| |
| Much of British manufacturing industry
seems to be in decline. Why should this be so and does it matter? If it
does matter, what can be done about it? The following two articles look
at the issues. |
Industry
is dying a slow, lonely death Guardian (12/3/03)
Far
East's long shadow over industrial Britain Telegraph (12/3/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
Why are manufacturing
companies in the UK generally faring far worse than service-sector companies? |
| 2. |
Is it important to have
a thriving manufacturing sector, or can the UK prosper purely through its
service sector? |
| 3. |
What policies should the
government adopt towards the manufacturing sector? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 17: Towards a more stable monetary world
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapters 24, 25 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 12 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 26, 31 |
| |
| "International financial crises have
been an on-and-off feature of the global economy in the past 40 years.
Understanding how the international monetary arrangements came into play
can point to ways of establishing a greater degree of control in future."
Thus begins the following linked article by Robert Mundell. |
After
40 years: Towards a more stable monetary world OECD Economic Observer
(29/1/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
Why were floating currencies
adopted in 1973? |
| 2. |
Why was the adoption of
floating exchange rates "at most a second-best solution"? |
| 3. |
Explain the "three deficiencies"
of the present international monetary arrangements. |
| 4. |
What are the arguments for and against having
a single world currency? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 18: Mali reaches Completion Point under the HIPC scheme
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapter 26 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapter 12 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapter 31 |
| |
| It was announced this month that Mali
has become the seventh of the 42
highly-indebted poor countries (HIPC) to reach the completion point
under the enhanced
HIPC debt relief scheme. The following articles report on this and
discuss its implications. |
At
last, some progress on HIPC: Mali reaches Completion Point Jubilee
Research (11/3/03)
IMF/World
Bank Debt Relief AllAfrica.com (10/3/03)
IMF
And World Bank Support US $675 Million in Debt Service Relief for Mali
DevNews Media Centre, World Bank (7/3/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
Why is the HIPC scheme?
Why does it not provide for the complete cancellation of all the debts
of these countries? |
| 2. |
Why was Mali now qualified
to reach the 'completion point'? |
| 3. |
For what reasons may the
HIPC scheme not provide long-term debt sustainability for these countries? |
Go back to contents
News
Item 19: Have IMF policies failed developing countries?
| Relevant to: |
| Economics (4th
and 5th editions), Chapters 25, 26 |
| Essentials of Economics
(2nd edition), Chapters 11, 12 |
| Economics for Business
(2nd edition), Chapters 23, 31 |
| |
| In a report published this month (see
final link below), a group of IMF economists (including its Chief Economist,
Kenneth Rogoff) argues that financial globalisation has not benefited the
majority of developing countries. Yet the requirement to open up their
economies to international capital flows has been one of the major conditions
for IMF support. The report argues that by opening up their economies in
this way, developing countries make themselves more vulnerable to world
macroeconomic instability. The first two linked articles draw out some
of the features of the report. The third link is to the report itself.
The summary and overview sections bring out all the main points. |
IMF
admits policy failures BBC News Online (19/3/03)
IMF
admits its policies seldom work Telegraph (20/3/03)
Effects
of Financial Globalization on Developing Countries: Some Empirical Evidence
IMF (17/3/03)
| Questions |
| 1. |
What are the main findings
of the report? |
| 2. |
What policy implications
follow from the report? |
| 3. |
To what extent can developing
countries benefit from financial globalisation? |
Go back to contents