From Financieristic To Real Macroeconomics: Seeking Development Convergence In Ees
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Ffrench-Davis Muñoz, Ricardo
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From Financieristic To Real Macroeconomics: Seeking Development Convergence In Ees
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Abstract
There is a broad consensus that macroeconomic “fundamentals” are a
most relevant variable to enhance economic development. However,
there is wide misunderstanding about (i) which are the “sound
macroeconomic fundamentals", contributing to a sustained high
economic growth, and (ii) how to achieve and sustain them.
The approach that has been in fashion in the mainstream world and IFIs
emphasizes macroeconomic balances of two pillars: low inflation and
fiscal balances. We call it financieristic macroeconomic balances.
Additionally, a frequent assertion in the more recent conventional
literature is that an open capital account contributes to impose
macroeconomic discipline in EEs. Indeed, this approach assumes,
frequently implicitly, that full opening of the capital account
automatically generate an aggregate demand consistent with
productive capacity.
That approach implies a clear omission of the overall macroeconomic
environment for producers, which includes other most influential
variables such as consistency of aggregate demand with potential GDP,
and interest and exchange rates. As a consequence, in many emerging
economies (EEs) “a sound macroeconomics” (low inflation and fiscal
discipline) is observed, in parallel with slow growth and high
unemployment of labor and of productive capital resulting from
unstable aggregate demand and outlier interest and exchange rates.
The standard approach evidently includes other ingredients, but
assumes, that the hard, relevant, proof is in fulfilling those two pillars.
The belief is that that couple leads to achieving productive
development if the economy is liberalized.
There is strong evidence that financial macroeconomic balances have
provided a macroeconomic environment that has not contributed to a
high and sustained growth. A third pillar must be added, linked to the
productive side of the economy. The behavior of aggregate demand, at
levels consistent with potential GDP (productive capacity or production
frontier), is a crucial part of a third pillar of real macroeconomic
balances, which has frequently failed in neo-liberal experiences.
Similarly, are well-aligned macro-prices, like interest and exchange
rates. Frequently, these prices and aggregate demand have behaved as
outliers (out-of-equilibrium), as reflected in economies working either
below potential GDP (the most frequent result), or overheated, with a
booming aggregate demand and a large external deficit.
This article will widen the view on macroeconomic balances by
taking into account the macroeconomic incentives faced by firms and
workers in the productive side of the economy (the producers of GDP),
and the inter-relationship between financial and real variables. We
analyze alternative structural countercyclical fiscal policies,
intermediate exchange rate policies, and capital account approaches.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/144253
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Series Documentos de Trabajo, No. 272, 2008
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