International
conference on "Economic Liberalization and its
Implications for Development Policy with Special Reference
to India and Mexico", Mexico City, October 24
- 25, 2005. This was co-sponsored with the National
Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and the Latin
American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO). This
had around 50 participants from Latin America and
Asia. In addition, there was very substantial participation
from the student community of UNAM and FLACSO, so
that the audience numbered more than 100 people on
both days. Some of the most eminent economists in
Mexico, as well as policy makers from government ministries
and economists from the UN-ECLAC, as well as some
economists from other parts of the developing world
such as India, presented papers.
Sponsors
National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)
(Faculty of Economics and Research Project PAPIIT
IN302703)
International Development Economic Associates (IDEAS)
Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO)
Programme
Monday, 24 October 2005
Location: Unidad de Seminarios
Dr. Ignacio Chávez
Vivero Alto, Ciudad Universitaria
9.30 am
Inauguration by Dr. Roberto Escalante-Semerena, Dean
of the Faculty of
Economics, UNAM
10.00 to 12.00
Workshop 1 Financial liberalization
and development policy constraints in India and Mexico
C. P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
Macroeconomic trends after financial liberalization
in India
Guadalupe Mántey and Noemí Levy
Impact of financial liberalization on macroeconomic
performance, and implications for developing policy
in Mexico
José-Luis Calva
Policy recommendations for sustainable growth with
income equality
Edna Armendáriz
Capital account openness and its effects on economic
activity
Workshop 2 Exchange-rate
policies and their effects on income distribution
Julio López-Gallardo
Modernization, heterogeneity and employment in Mexico
Isaac Minian
Knowledge and segmentation in the production process,
and their importance for development policy: Evidences
from North America and South East Asia
Elena Cardero
The global financial market as a constraint to development
policy implementation: notes on the Mexican experience.
12.00 to 12.30 Coffee
break
12.30 to 14.30
Workshop 3 Weak currencies
and foreign banking penetration
Juan Castaignts
Dual monetary regimes in developing countries and
scope for monetary integration in Latin America
Carlos Rozo
Foreign capital take over Mexican banks
Celso Garrido
The Mexican banking sector after the 1995 crisis
Clemente Ruiz-Durán
Global financial systems’ coverage and the bank-excluded:
reflections for development policy
Workshop 4 Monetary control
through inflation targeting and its effects on economic
activity
Luis-Miguel Galindo
Asymmetric effects of monetary policy on output and
prices: the Mexican case
Etelberto Ortiz-Cruz
Inflation targeting: the inconsistent rule of the
tyrannical auctioneer
Tuesday 25 October 2005
Location: FLACSO
Carretera al Ajusco 377
Col. Héroes de Padierna
Delegación Tlalpan
9.30
Welcome
10.00 to 12.00
Workshop 1 Trade liberalization
effects on growth
Jayati Ghosh and C. P. Chandrasekhar
Trade liberalization in India and China: similar or
convergent strategies?
Alicia Puyana-Mutis
Trade liberalization in Mexico: some macroeconomic
effects
Jorge Mattar
The complementary agenda for trade liberalization
Workshop 2 Trade liberalization
and structural change
Juan-Carlos Moreno-Brid
NAFTA effects on manufacturing industry
José Romero
NAFTA and Mexico’s agricultural sector development
Jorge-Mario Martínez
Industrial specialization induced by North-South trade
agreements
12.00 to 12.30 Coffee
break
12.30 to 14.30
Workshop 3 Trade agreements and their effects on employment
and labor income
Pablo Ruiz-Nápoles
NAFTA and employment in Mexico
María-Elena Cardero
From import-substitution to the import-export model
Ivico Ahumada
Globalizations’ impact on labor policies
Workshop 4 Social Aspects
of trade liberalization
René Hernández
Trade liberalization effects on economic development
and poverty in El Salvador and Costa Rica
Blanca Torres
Environmental effects of NAFTA, and US see-sawing
politics
14.30 Close of conference
October 26, 2005.
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