The
Recent years of rapid opening up and integration
of developing countries into the world
economy have placed a growing demand on
policy makers and called for greater flexibility
in the policy-making process but have
simultaneously made many of the traditional
instruments of development and macroeconomic
policy ineffective or simply unavailable
because of proliferation of international
rules, obligations and practices. Consequently
questions have been raised about whether
such constraints over national economic
policy are compatible with development,
including the capacity to foster conditions
for steady quality employment growth.
This is the question this paper explores
in detail.
July 9, 2007.
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