Tags → Macroeconomy
- Transnistrian Economy: Initiatives and Risks
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May 15, 2007 09:51
The paper focuses on macroeconomic tendencies in Transnistria and financial risks it is undertaking in development process.
- Macroeconomic Model for Ukraine
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May 15, 2007 09:53
This paper presents the most recent version of the quarterly Macroeconomic Model of the Ukrainian economy, its assumptions and possible applications.
- News of the Month, April, 2007
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May 15, 2007 09:54
This is a monthly publication, which includes 4-5 brief analyses dealing with underlying macroeconomic and microeconomic issues. The publication focuses on both Commonwealth of Independent Countries (CIS) and Central and Eastern European Countries (CEEC).
- News of the Month, March, 2007
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May 21, 2007 13:44
This is a monthly publication, which includes 4-5 brief analyses dealing with underlying macroeconomic and microeconomic issues. The publication focuses on both Commonwealth of Independent Countries (CIS) and Central and Eastern European Countries (CEEC).
- Capital flight and capital outflows from Russia: symptom, cause and cure
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May 16, 2007 14:41
Capital flight is a fuzzy and unhelpful concept. Russian capital outflows should be analysed in a wider context involving all major determinants of the risk and return faced by Russian savers and investors. Building saver/investor confidence and strengthening the credibility of policies and institutions are preconditions for enhancing the quantity and quality of domestic capital formation in Russia. As reforms progress (financial sector reforms and a fundamental overhaul of the public administration are key), Russian ‘capital flight’ is set to decrease gradually. Even so, it will remain a feature of the economic landscape for many years. Sharp one-off reversals in net capital flows could disrupt the macroeconomy. A capital repatriation amnesty could prove counterproductive.
- Russian Dilemmas
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November 23, 2007 13:06
This paper discusses some aspects of the legacy of the socialist past that make Russia's (or Ukraine's) macroeconomic policy problems rather different from those of the Latin American countries whose stabilisations are often cited as models for the USSR successor states. In particular, we want to consider (1) the structure of the inherited capital stock and (2) the lack of financial instruments, institutions, and markets.
- Macroeconomic policy and the role of the state in a changing world
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November 23, 2007 15:52
The purpose of this paper is to assess macroeconomic policy and the role of the state in light of the experiences in the 50 years since Keynesian ideas were broadly applied, the changing structure of the world economy and the advance of economic ideas.






