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Low-income countries in sub-Saharan Africa present unique monetary policy challenges, from the high share of volatile food in consumption to underdeveloped financial markets; however most academic and policy work on monetary policy is aimed at much richer countries. Can economic models and methods invented for rich countries even be adapted and applied here? How does and should monetary policy work in sub-Saharan African? Monetary Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa answers these questions and provides practical tools and policy guidance to respond to the complex challenges of this region. Most…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Low-income countries in sub-Saharan Africa present unique monetary policy challenges, from the high share of volatile food in consumption to underdeveloped financial markets; however most academic and policy work on monetary policy is aimed at much richer countries. Can economic models and methods invented for rich countries even be adapted and applied here? How does and should monetary policy work in sub-Saharan African? Monetary Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa answers these questions and provides practical tools and policy guidance to respond to the complex challenges of this region. Most countries in sub-Saharan Africa have made great progress in stabilizing inflation over the past two decades. As they have achieved a degree of basic macroeconomic stability, policymakers are looking to avoid policy misalignments and respond appropriately to shocks in order to achieve stability and growth. Officially, they often have adopted "money targeting" frameworks, a regime that has long disappeared from almost all advanced and even emerging-market discussions. In practice, though, they are in many cases finding current regimes lacking, with opaque and sometimes inconsistent objectives, inadequate transmission of policy to the economy, and difficulties in responding to supply shocks. Monetary Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa takes a new approach by applying dynamic general equilibrium models suitably adapted to reflect key features of low-income countries for the analysis of monetary policy in sub-Saharan African countries. Using a progressive approach derived from the International Monetary Fund's extensive practice and research, Monetary Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa seeks to address what we know about the empirics of monetary transmission in low-income countries, how monetary policy can work in countries characterized by underdeveloped financial markets and opaque policy regimes, and how we can use empirical and theoretical methods largely derived in advanced countries to answer these questions. It then uses these key topics to guide policymakers as they attempt to adjust food price, terms of trade, aid shocks, and the effects of the global financial crisis.

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Autorenporträt
Andrew Berg is Deputy Director of the IMF's Institute for Capacity Development. He first joined the IMF in 1993 and has most recently worked recently in the Research Department as chief of the development macroeconomic division. Before that, he worked in the African Department, including as chief of the regional studies division and mission chief to Malawi, and in the Department of Strategy Policy and Review. He has also worked at the U.S. Treasury and as an associate of Jeffrey Sachs. He has a Ph.D. in Economics from MIT and an undergraduate degree from Harvard. He has published articles on, among other things, growth accelerations, the macroeconomics of aid, predicting currency crises, inequality, and the implications of public investment for debt sustainability, in addition to monetary policy. Rafael Portillo is at the IMF, where he has worked in the Western Hemisphere, Monetary and Capital Markets, African, and Research Departments. He took leave from the IMF in 2016-17 to work at the Joint Vienna Institute. His work has focused on macroeconomic modeling and monetary policy issues, through surveillance, research and technical assistance. Mr. Portillo has coauthored several IMF policy papers, working papers and academic publications. He received his PhD in Economics in 2006 from the University of Michigan and also holds degrees from the Université Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne) and the Université Paris IX (Dauphine).