links international
trading and public debt, nationally and internationally,
the material in this book represents a useful
roadmap to the issues that need to be addressed.
Indeed, only crisis recovery measures that dare
to reshape the paradigm linking trade and debt
on the basis of the lessons learned can lead
to a more resilient and development-oriented
global economy.
Like the previous volume in this series, this
one jumps off from the premise that a holistic
approach to policy -making in trade and finance
can bring substantial improvements in ensuring
systemic coherence and providing better development
outcomes than an approach that would take such
areas in isolation. This volume singles out
debt as an area of finance and lays out the
key areas of concern in linking debt and trade
from a development perspective. It addresses
the political and the technical dimensions of
linking debt and trade, the potential and limitation
of market access, the problems related to the
export growth-debt repayment link, the effects
on debt of foreign investment rules, the impacts
of domestic monetary policy on debt and trade,
and issues in the definition of debt sustainability
and factoring trade performance into debt sustainability
assessments.
Featured contributors include: Andreas Antoniou,
Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira, Alfredo Calcagno,
Heiner Flassbeck, Barry Herman, Richard Kozul-Wright,
Jan Kregel, Jorg Mayer, Manuel Montes, Machiko
Nissanke, Lida Nunez, Matthew Odedokun, Damian
Ondo Mane, Matthias Rau, Arslan Razmi, Umesh
Sookmani, Yash Tandon, Cecile Valadier, Christina
Weller.
For the full book, table of contents, as well
as information on how to order your own copy,
visithttp://www.coc.org/node/6530
May 06, 2010.
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