Preface
Overview
1: Introducing the key questions
2: Objectives
Macroeconomics
3: Three perspectives on policy
4: Is macroeconomics different in developing countries?
5: Policy instruments from three perspectives: fiscal and monetary
policy
6: Open economy complications
7: Exchange rate management and micro tools for macro
management
8: Policy frameworks
9: Formal approaches
Capital Market Liberalization
10: Capital market liberalization: the arguments for and
against
11: A formal approach: capital market failures
12: Interventions in capital markets
13: Capital market liberalization: summary and remaining
debates
Conclusion
14: Stabilization, liberalization, and growth
Joseph E. Stiglitz was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 2001
and is University Professor at Columbia University where he founded
the Initiative for Policy Dialogue in 2000. He was Chair of
President Bill Clinton's Council of Economic Advisors from 1995-97
and Chief Economist and Senior Vice-President of the World Bank
from 1997-2000. His best known recent publications include
'Globalization and its Discontents' (2002) and 'The Roaring
Nineties' (2003).
José Antonio Ocampo holds a BA degree from the University of Notre
Dame, and a Ph.D. in Economics and Sociology from Yale University.
He is the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Economic and
Social Affairs. As such, he heads the UN Department of Economic and
Social Affairs (DESA) and chairs the UN Executive Committee on
Economic and Social Affairs.
Prior to assuming his present position in the United Nations, he
held a number of posts in the Government of Colombia, including
those of Minister of Finance and Public Credit, Director of the
National Planning Department and Minister of Agriculture and was
former Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). His academic pursuits have
included service as Director of the Foundation for Higher Education
and Development, Professor of Economics at
the Universidad de los Andes and the Universidad Nacional de
Colombia, and Visiting Professor at Cambridge, Yale and Oxford
Universities. Shari Spiegel joined IPD from Lazard Asset Management
where she
was a Director of Lazard LLC. Prior to joining Lazard, Ms. Spiegel
spent several years working in Hungary. She was one of the founders
of Budapest Investment Management Company, a subsidiary of Budapest
Bank, which launched the first domestic investment funds in
Hungary. Previous to her work in Hungary, Ms. Spiegel worked at
Citibank and Drexel Burnham Lambert and has an MA in economics from
Princeton University and a BA in applied mathematics and economics
from Northwestern University. She is
an Adjunct Professor at Columbia University's School of
International and Public Affairs. Ricardo Ffrench-Davis is
Principal Regional Adviser of the UN Economic Commission for Latin
America and the
Caribbean (ECLAC) and a professor of Economics at the University of
Chile, Santiago de Chile. He was Chief Economist of the Central
Bank of Chile and Director of the Centre for Economic Research on
Latin America (CIEPLAN). Vice Chancellor of the University of
Delhi. Professor Nayyar is a distinguished economist, having taught
at the University of Oxford, University of Sussex, the Indian
Institute of Management, Calcutta and Jariasharlal University, New
Delhi. He also lectured at the University
of Paris and Catholic University in Rio de Janeiro. He served as
Chief Economic Advisor to the Government of India and was Permanent
Secretary in the Ministry of Finance. The author of numerous
books
and articles, Professor Nayyar is Chairman of the Board of
Governors of the World Institute for Development Economics
Research, and a Member of the Advisory Council for the
International Development Centre at the University of Oxford.
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