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The Chilean Economy: Policy Lessons and Challenges
Contributor(s): Bosworth, Barry P. (Editor), Dornbusch, Rudiger (Editor), Laban, Raul (Editor)
ISBN: 0815710453     ISBN-13: 9780815710455
Publisher: Brookings Institution Press
OUR PRICE:   $30.69  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: March 1994
Qty:
Annotation: In this book a prominent group of international scholars review the history of economic reform in Chile and assess the effectiveness of its policies. This information encompasses not only the successful approaches that turned around the Chilean economy, but also the significant mistakes that raised transition costs along the way.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Economics - General
- Business & Economics | International - General
- Political Science | World - Caribbean & Latin American
Dewey: 330.983
LCCN: 93043252
Lexile Measure: 1500
Physical Information: 1.22" H x 6.07" W x 9.06" (1.38 lbs) 456 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Should countries in Latin America and Eastern Europe follow the Chilean approach to economic restructuring, market liberalization, and stabilization? Following years of hyperinflation and domestic turmoil, Chile undertook a series of dramatic economic reforms. Chile has also served as a social laboratory for such policies as privatization and social security reform that are of interest to both developed and developing economies. Having implemented much of the original reform program and emerging in the 1990s with a new democratic government, Chile also raises interesting questions about what comes next in its policies to promote growth.

The advent in the 1990s of Chile as a model for economic reform is something of a surprise. Many of the reforms were actually introduced in the 1970s, and for a number of years many seemed to have failed to achieve their primary objectives. The more recent, positive view of the Chilean experience results from developments after 1983. Since then, the Chilean economy has grown robustly. What remains controversial is the question why the benefits of the reforms took so long to emerge.

In this book, international scholars review the reforms in Chile and assess their effectiveness. They evaluate stabilization policy, economic growth, privatization, reform of the social security system, and the politics of economic reform. Now that many of the original reforms have been largely completed, and Chile has maintained a coherent macroeconomic policy with slowly declining inflation, the authors prescribe what Chile must do to sustain growth in the future.

In addition to the editors, contributors include Eduardo Bitran, University of Chile; Vittorio Corbo, Catholic University of Chile; Peter Diamond, MIT; Sebastian Edwards, University of California, Los Angeles, and the World Bank; Stanley Fischer, MIT; Felipe Larrain B., Catholic University of Chile; Mario Marcel, IDB; Manuel Marf n, CIEPLAN; Ra l E. S ez, CIEPLAN; Andr s Solimano, the World Bank; Andr s Velasco, New York University; and Salvador Vald s-Prieto, Catholic University of Chile.