www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Can money targets still anchor inflation in Tanzania? New Paper

Tanzania, along with all the other countries in the East African Community (EAC), seeks to anchor inflation by targeting the growth in the money supply. In recent years such frameworks have become less effective as structural change and financial innovation have made it increasingly difficult to identify a sufficiently stable demand for money function.

In a new paper, Christopher S. Adam (Oxford University and IGC), Pantaleo J. Kessy (Bank of Tanzania and IGC), Johnson J. Nyella (Bank of Tanzania) and Stephen A. O‟Connell (Swarthmore and IGC) develop an econometric model of the demand for broad money in Tanzania which explicitly models the process of structural change in Tanzania since the major economic and financial reforms of the mid-1990s. They show how this model both explains anomalies in the recent monetary history of Tanzania and improves on the forecast accuracy of velocity projections underpinning the Bank of Tanzania’s policy framework. The authors conclude that broad money targeting remains a valid basis for the conduct of monetary policy in Tanzania as it and its EAC partners move towards full-fledged inflation targeting regimes over the coming years.

This paper is the outcome of research collaboration between staff of the Bank of Tanzania and the IGC and can be accessed in the 'Publications' and 'Policy' sections.

Update

15th December 2010
Education Reform Policy Brief

This policy brief draws on research papers and reports from a large-scale longitudinal study conducted by Tahir Andrabi, Jishnu Das and Asim Ijaz Khwaja through a grant from the World Bank’s South Asia Regions and Knowledge for Change Trust Funds. The study analyses the education sector in Pakistan, its major challenges and policy options for moving forward. The data from the study is public and is available at www.leapsproject.org.

Click here to read

15th October 2010
Reforming Education Systems - Growth Week podcast

Michael Kremer (Harvard University) discusses issues surrounding reform of education systems in developing countries based on evidence from studies on incentive mechanisms, peer effects and other interventions. He is joined by Professor Geeta Kingdon (Institute of Education), Dr Lansana Nyalley (Education Division, Government of Sierra Leone), Professor James Tooley (Newcastle University) and Professor Steve Machin (IGC and UCL). Click here to listen: http://www.theigc.org/talk/reforming-education-systems-growth-week-podcast

15th October 2010
Agricultural Revolution or Industrial Revolution? - Growth Week Podcast

A distinguished panel tackles controversial and highly significant questions regarding the relative importance of industrial and agricultural revolution in the developing countries today, for both economic growth and wider development - hear Ernest Aryeetey, Ijaz Nabi, Mark Rosenzweig, Paul Romer,John Sutton and Joel Kibazo. Click here: http://www.theigc.org/talk/industrial-revolution-or-agricultural-revolut...

15th October 2010
China and Africa - Paul Collier podcast

Is China's strategy - of negotiating deals in which resources are exchanged for infrastructure - mutually beneficial, or a new variant of the plunder of Africa? China 'asks no questions' of African governments: is that respectful of African sovereignty or an abrogation of responsibility?

Click here for Paul Collier's Growth Week 2010 speech: http://www.theigc.org/talk/managing-natural-resource-rents