Publicação:
Gearing macroeconomic polices to manage large inflows of ODA: The implications for HIV/AIDS programmes

Carregando...
Imagem de Miniatura

Paginação

Primeira página

Última página

Data

Data de publicação

Data da Série

Data do evento

Data

Data de defesa

Data

Edição

Idioma

eng

Cobertura espacial

Cobertura temporal

País

Brasil

organization.page.location.country

Tipo de evento

Grau Acadêmico

Fonte original

ISBN

ISSN

DOI

dARK

item.page.project.ID

item.page.project.productID

Detentor dos direitos autorais

International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth
United Nations Development Programme

Acesso à informação

Acesso Aberto

Termos de uso

O texto e dados desta publicação podem ser reproduzidos desde que as fontes sejam citadas. Reproduções com fins comerciais são proibidas.

Titulo alternativo

item.page.organization.alternative

Variações no nome completo

Orientador(a)

Editor(a)

Organizador(a)

Coordenador(a)

item.page.organization.manager

Outras autorias

Palestrante/Mediador(a)/Debatedor(a)

Coodenador do Projeto

Resumo

This paper examines how macroeconomic policies can be managed to accommodate a large inflow of foreign aid to combat the HIV/AIDS epidemic and still maintain macroeconomic stability. Because of the daunting scale of this epidemic, funds need to be disbursed urgently in order to contain its spread, yet some economists worry that rapidly scaling up foreign assistance for this purpose will cause inflation and appreciation of the real exchange rate. If such effects occur, they could impair a country’s international competitiveness and endanger its growth prospects. However, this paper maintains that such effects can be minimised if governments and central banks coordinate fiscal, monetary and exchange rate policies. If they do, they should be able to both ‘spend’ aid in order to finance larger government programmes and ‘absorb’ aid in order to import more real resources. Often, governments that receive foreign aid neither spend nor absorb it fully, defeating the basic purpose of development assistance. Because governments fear inflation, they are reluctant to finance a significant increase in spending on HIV/AIDS programmes even when the funding is available. Central banks are reluctant to sell the foreign currency they receive from HIV/AIDS related aid because they fear that such an action might appreciate the domestic currency. However, if aid-induced spending on HIV/AIDS programmes minimises the adverse impact of the epidemic on human capabilities, not only would it combat a grave human development crisis but also it could safeguard long-term economic growth. Instead of adhering to restrictive macroeconomic policies, governments could target their increased spending on productivity enhancing public investment and central banks could amplify the flow of low-cost credit to stimulate private investment. If the real exchange rate does begin to appreciate, the central bank can implement means to manage its fluctuations in order to maintain competitiveness. Moreover, if a significant proportion of HIV/AIDS funds is used to directly finance the import of drugs and medical equipment that are not produced domestically (which is often the case), there is likely to be even less impact on inflation or appreciation of the exchange rate.

Resumo traduzido

organization.page.description

Sobre o pesquisador

Endereço de Email

ORCID

Lattes

Google Scholar ID

Web of Science ResearcherID

Scopus ID

Informações sobre o projeto

project.page.project.productdescription

Vocabulário Controlado do Ipea

Palavras-chave

Palavras-chave traduzidas

JEL

Citação

Aviso

Notas

Série / coleção

Versão preliminar

Versão final dessa publicação

Faz parte da série

Publicações relacionadas / semelhantes

organization.page.relation.references

Livros

Publicações

Faz parte da série

Fascículos

Eventos relacionados

Volumes

Projetos de Pesquisa

Unidades Organizacionais

REPOSITÓRIO DO CONHECIMENTO DO IPEA
Redes sociais