Regional Economic Outlook : Western Hemisphere, April 2011.

By: Hemisphere Dept., International Monetary Fund. WesternMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: Washington : International Monetary Fund, 2011Copyright date: ©2011Description: 1 online resource (95 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781455264360Subject(s): Economic forecasting -- Western Hemisphere | Western Hemisphere -- Economic conditions -- 21st centuryGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Regional Economic Outlook : Western Hemisphere, April 2011DDC classification: 330.971100112 LOC classification: HC94 -- .R44 2011ebOnline resources: Click to View
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Executive Summary -- 1. Global, U.S., and Canadian Outlook -- 1.1. The Global Outlook-A Dual Speed Expansion Proceeds with Increasing Risks -- Advanced Economies -- Emerging Market Economies -- 1.2. United States-Ongoing Recovery with Downside Risks -- What Kinds of Policies Are Needed? -- 1.3. Canada-Recovery Gathers Strength -- 1.4. Implications for the Latin American and Caribbean Region -- 2. Outlook and Policy Issues for Latin America and the Caribbean -- 2.1. Overview -- 2.2. Policy Challenges -- South America-Managing Double Tailwinds -- South America-The Less Financially Integrated Commodity Exporters -- Mexico and Central America-Rebuilding Policy Buffers -- The Caribbean-Recovery Beginning Amid High Debt -- 2.3. Dealing with the Oil and Food Price Shock -- Impact of Global Commodity Price Shocks on Inflation -- Monetary Policy in the Face of Commodity Price Shocks -- Social Policies and Commodity Price Shocks: Protecting the Poor -- 2.4. Credit Markets and Asset Prices-Are Bubbly Conditions Taking Hold? -- Bank Credit Growth -- Corporate Indebtedness -- Equity Prices -- Housing Prices -- 2.5. Capital Inflows-Guarding Against the Reversal of Favorable Global Conditions -- Annex 2.1. Estimating Inflation Pass-Throughs -- 3. Foreign Exchange Market Intervention: How Good a Defense Against Appreciation Winds? -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Key Trends -- 3.3. Modalities of Intervention -- 3.4. Searching for Effects of Intervention: New Evidence -- An Econometric Panel Approach -- 3.5. Quasi-Fiscal Costs of FXI -- 3.6. Takeaways and Policy Considerations -- Annex 3.1. Foreign Exchange Intervention and International Reserves: Data Availability -- Annex 3.2. Methodological Strategy for the Panel Approach -- Annex 3.3. Confidence Intervals for the Synthetic Currency -- Western Hemisphere: Main Economic Indicators.
Latin America and the Caribbean: Main Fiscal Indicators -- References -- New Publications from the Western Hemisphere Department, July 2009-April 2011 -- Boxes -- 1.1. Long-Term Outlook for the U.S. Federal Government Finances -- 1.2. Household Deleveraging in the United States -- 1.3. Canada's Financial System Resilience: What Can Others Learn? -- 2.1. Changing Export Patterns in Latin America and the Caribbean -- 2.2. An Update on Macroprudential Policies -- 2.3. Haiti: Economic Developments since the January 2010 Earthquake -- 2.4. Caribbean Offshore Financial Centers: Opportunities and Challenges -- 2.5. The Information Value of Core Inflation -- 2.6. Stock Market Developments in the Region: The Role of Commodities -- 3.1. Actual Intervention and Changes in Gross International Reserves -- 3.2. Foreign Exchange Intervention Rules in Practice: Selected Latin American Experiences -- 3.3. Instruments for Foreign Exchange Purchases -- 3.4. Channels of Transmission of Foreign Exchange Intervention to the Exchange Rate -- 3.5. Overview of Recent Empirical Studies on Foreign Exchange Intervention in Latin America.
Summary: Despite the recent deterioration in the global economic environment, projections for the region involve only a modest worsening of the outlook. The October 2011 Regional Economic Outlook: Western Hemisphere cautions, however, that there are severe downside risks. A sharp slowdown in Asia, for example in response to a recession in advanced economies, could impact commodity prices, with negative effects on Latin American commodity exporters. With global monetary policy likely to remain accommodative, capital flows could exacerbate overheating and amplify vulnerabilities in emerging markets. Countries with strong real linkages to the United States face a somewhat weaker outlook and should give priority to reducing public debt. Although much of the Caribbean is recovering from a prolonged recession, the outlook remains constrained by high public debt and weak tourism flows. This issue finds that policies can play an important role in mitigating the economic impact of terms-of-trade shocks, and underscores the need to rebuild policy buffers.
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Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Executive Summary -- 1. Global, U.S., and Canadian Outlook -- 1.1. The Global Outlook-A Dual Speed Expansion Proceeds with Increasing Risks -- Advanced Economies -- Emerging Market Economies -- 1.2. United States-Ongoing Recovery with Downside Risks -- What Kinds of Policies Are Needed? -- 1.3. Canada-Recovery Gathers Strength -- 1.4. Implications for the Latin American and Caribbean Region -- 2. Outlook and Policy Issues for Latin America and the Caribbean -- 2.1. Overview -- 2.2. Policy Challenges -- South America-Managing Double Tailwinds -- South America-The Less Financially Integrated Commodity Exporters -- Mexico and Central America-Rebuilding Policy Buffers -- The Caribbean-Recovery Beginning Amid High Debt -- 2.3. Dealing with the Oil and Food Price Shock -- Impact of Global Commodity Price Shocks on Inflation -- Monetary Policy in the Face of Commodity Price Shocks -- Social Policies and Commodity Price Shocks: Protecting the Poor -- 2.4. Credit Markets and Asset Prices-Are Bubbly Conditions Taking Hold? -- Bank Credit Growth -- Corporate Indebtedness -- Equity Prices -- Housing Prices -- 2.5. Capital Inflows-Guarding Against the Reversal of Favorable Global Conditions -- Annex 2.1. Estimating Inflation Pass-Throughs -- 3. Foreign Exchange Market Intervention: How Good a Defense Against Appreciation Winds? -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Key Trends -- 3.3. Modalities of Intervention -- 3.4. Searching for Effects of Intervention: New Evidence -- An Econometric Panel Approach -- 3.5. Quasi-Fiscal Costs of FXI -- 3.6. Takeaways and Policy Considerations -- Annex 3.1. Foreign Exchange Intervention and International Reserves: Data Availability -- Annex 3.2. Methodological Strategy for the Panel Approach -- Annex 3.3. Confidence Intervals for the Synthetic Currency -- Western Hemisphere: Main Economic Indicators.

Latin America and the Caribbean: Main Fiscal Indicators -- References -- New Publications from the Western Hemisphere Department, July 2009-April 2011 -- Boxes -- 1.1. Long-Term Outlook for the U.S. Federal Government Finances -- 1.2. Household Deleveraging in the United States -- 1.3. Canada's Financial System Resilience: What Can Others Learn? -- 2.1. Changing Export Patterns in Latin America and the Caribbean -- 2.2. An Update on Macroprudential Policies -- 2.3. Haiti: Economic Developments since the January 2010 Earthquake -- 2.4. Caribbean Offshore Financial Centers: Opportunities and Challenges -- 2.5. The Information Value of Core Inflation -- 2.6. Stock Market Developments in the Region: The Role of Commodities -- 3.1. Actual Intervention and Changes in Gross International Reserves -- 3.2. Foreign Exchange Intervention Rules in Practice: Selected Latin American Experiences -- 3.3. Instruments for Foreign Exchange Purchases -- 3.4. Channels of Transmission of Foreign Exchange Intervention to the Exchange Rate -- 3.5. Overview of Recent Empirical Studies on Foreign Exchange Intervention in Latin America.

Despite the recent deterioration in the global economic environment, projections for the region involve only a modest worsening of the outlook. The October 2011 Regional Economic Outlook: Western Hemisphere cautions, however, that there are severe downside risks. A sharp slowdown in Asia, for example in response to a recession in advanced economies, could impact commodity prices, with negative effects on Latin American commodity exporters. With global monetary policy likely to remain accommodative, capital flows could exacerbate overheating and amplify vulnerabilities in emerging markets. Countries with strong real linkages to the United States face a somewhat weaker outlook and should give priority to reducing public debt. Although much of the Caribbean is recovering from a prolonged recession, the outlook remains constrained by high public debt and weak tourism flows. This issue finds that policies can play an important role in mitigating the economic impact of terms-of-trade shocks, and underscores the need to rebuild policy buffers.

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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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