to-regulate
international financial markets. This volume
presents a pro-poor macroeconomic policy allowing
countries to recapture policy space, help promote
growth, reduce inequality and diminish poverty
in a sustainable way.
Contents
PART 1: OVERVIEW AND POVERTY
IMPACT OF MAIN MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
- Potential and Limitations of Pro-Poor Macroeconomics:
An Overview
G.A.Cornia
- Pro-Poor Fiscal Policy in the Globalized
Economy
R.Jha
- Can Monetary Approaches to Stabilization
be Pro-Poor?
S.K.Chand
- Exchange Rate Regimes for Development and
Poverty Alleviation
G.A.Cornia
- Portfolio Flows, Macroeconomic Policy and
Global Poverty
C.E.Weller & R.Chaurushiya
- The Effects of FDI on Growth and Inequality
C.Bonassi, G.Giovannetti
& G.Ricchiuti
- Safety Nets for the Poor: A Missing International
Dimension?
S.G.Reddy
PART 2: COUNTRY CASE STUDIES
- Financial and Trade Reforms and Impact
on Poverty and Income Inequality: The Case
of Mauritius
S.K.Bundoo
- Macroeconomic Policy, Growth, Redistribution
and Poverty Reduction: The Case of Malaysia
W.C.Hui and J.K.S.
- The Search for Macroeconomic Stability and
Growth under Persistent Inequality: The Case
of Chile
A.Solimano & M.Pollack
- Macroeconomic Policy, Inequality and Poverty
Reduction in Fast-Growing India and China
C.P.Chandrasekhar &
Jayati Ghosh
- Heterodox Macroeconomic Policies, Inequality
and Poverty in Uzbekistan
G.A.Cornia
- Macroeconomic Policy and Pro-Poor Growth
in a Dualistic Economy: The Case of Bolivia
S.Klasen
- Has Macroeconomic Policy Been Pro-Poor in
Brazil?
J.S.Arbache
About the Author
Giovanni Andrea Cornia is Professor of Economics
at the University of Florence, Italy, and has
lectured at several other universities. During
the latter half of the 1990s, he was the Director
of the World Institute for Development Economics
Research (WIDER) in Helsinki. He has held research
positions in FIAT, UNCTAD, UNECE and UNICEF
and edited or co-edited 11 books, contributed
to 20 books edited by others and published over
50 journal articles on macroeconomics, inequality,
poverty, mortality and human capital in developing
and transitional economies.
Introductory
chapter by Giovanni Andrea Cornia
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