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Development Macroeconomics in Latin America and Mexico brings the attention of academics, practitioners, and policy makers to the neglected macroeconomic factors that can account for both the unsatisfactory average growth performance of Latin American and the diversity around this average.

Produktbeschreibung
Development Macroeconomics in Latin America and Mexico brings the attention of academics, practitioners, and policy makers to the neglected macroeconomic factors that can account for both the unsatisfactory average growth performance of Latin American and the diversity around this average.
Autorenporträt
Professor of Economics at the National University of Mexico and Emeritus Professor at the University of Notre Dame, USA, Jaime Ros specializes in development economics with special reference to Mexico and Latin America. Recent books include Rethinking Economic Development, Growth, and Institutions (OUP, 2013), Algunas Tesis Equivocadas sobre el Estancamiento Económico de México (Colegio de México-UNAM, 2013), The Oxford Handbook of Latin American Economics (OUP, 2011), Development and Growth in the Mexican Economy (OUP, 2009, with Juan Carlos Moreno-Brid), and International Handbook of Development Economics (Edward Elgar, 2008, edited with Amitava Dutt).
Rezensionen
"The book is an attractive combination of theoretical and applied economics. It gives answers to two main questions: What explains the poor growth of the Latin American region over the past thirty years? What explains the diversity in the growth performances of individual Latin American countries in the same period? The legacy of the shocks of the 1980s interacting with the variety of macroeconomic policies (fiscal, monetary, and exchange) can provide satisfactory answers to both questions." - Roberto Frenkel, Principal Research Associate at Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad (CEDES); Honorary Professor, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina

"The poor growth performance of Latin America in the post-market reforms era is one of the central facts - and, in a sense, paradoxes - that development economics must explain. This is particularly so of Mexico, a great performer in 1940-80 and a major reformer but one of the most frustrating stories in recent decades. This collection by one of Latin America's leading development economists is an outstanding contribution to this debate. It is a must-read!" - José Antonio Ocampo, Professor, Columbia University, USA; former Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC); former Finance Minister of Colombia