EXCHANGE RATE DYNAMICS
Citations
814 | The purchasing power parity puzzle - Rogoff - 1996 |
388 | Natural resource abundance and economic growth. NBER Working Paper No - Sachs, Warner - 1995 |
361 | Barriers to technology adoption and development - Parente, Prescott - 1994 |
353 | Investment in humans, technological diffusion, and economic growth - Nelson, Edmund - 1966 |
298 | Perspectives on PPP and long-run real exchange rates’. - Froot, Rogoff - 1995 |
256 | The narrow moving band, the Dutch disease, and the competitive consequences of Mrs. Thatcher: notes on trade in the presence of dynamic scale economies - Krugman - 1987 |
202 | Innovation and Growth in the Global Economy - Grossman, Helpman - 1991 |
183 | Oil Windfalls: Blessing or Curse - Gelb - 1988 |
97 | Appropriate Growth Policy: a Unifying Framework’. - Aghion, Howitt - 2006 |
89 | Human Capital and Technology Diffusion - Benhabib, Spiegel - 2005 |
85 | Why do resource-abundant economies grow more slowly - Rodriguez, Sachs - 1998 |
63 | The ‘Dutch Disease’: A disease after all - Wijnbergen - 1984 |
62 | Learning by Doing and the Dutch disease - Torvik - 2001 |
60 | Policies to Promote Growth and Employment - Lewis - 2001 |
53 | Externalities and Growth," - Klenow, Rodriguez-Clare - 2004 |
48 | The World Income Distribution”,
- Acemoglu, Ventura
- 2001
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Citation Context ... rate in the long run. This dynamics is consistent with the common understanding thats14 differences in income and productivity levels are permanent, while differences in growth ratessare transitory (=-=Acemoglu and Ventura, 2002-=-).s4. Resource boom, real exchange rate dynamics and structural change in South AfricasAs South Africa is a resource-rich economy with mining exports (mainly gold) accounting forsabout half of total e... |
45 |
The Dutch Disease in a Developing Country– Oil Reserves in Cameroon.
- Weiner
- 1989
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Citation Context ...amicssMost applied general equilibrium analyses in the Dutch disease literature are static, and do notscapture real exchange rate dynamics or long-run structural effects of the boom (see forsinstance =-=Benjamin et al., 1989-=-, and Vos, 1998). As illustrated theoretically by Torvik (2001),sproductivity effects following a resource boom generate real depreciation after the initialsappreciation of the real exchange rate, wit... |
45 | Dynamic Gains from Trade: Evidence from - Jonsson, Subramanian - 2001 |
44 | Estimation of the Equilibrium Real Exchange Rate for South Africa, IMF Working Paper, - MacDonald, Ricci - 2003 |
36 | A UniÞed Theory of the Evolution of International Income Levels,"
- Parente, Prescott
- 2004
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Citation Context ... the existing Dutch disease literature we extend the productivity specification tosinclude trade barriers and technology gap dynamics, consistent with the modernsunderstanding of productivity growth (=-=Parente and Prescott, 2005-=-, and Klenow andsRodriguez-Clare, 2005). We model a small open economy that faces a perfect capital marketswith the interest rate exogenously given from the world market. This means that we ignore the... |
33 | International spillovers, productivity growth and openness in Thailand: An intertemporal general equilibrium analysis - Diao, Rattsø, et al. - 2005 |
27 | Purchasing Power Parity and New Trade Theory,” International Monetary Fund Working Paper No. - MacDonald, Ricci - 2002 |
26 |
Aid Flows and Dutch Disease in a General Equilibrium Framework for Pakistan. Working Papers—Sub-Series on Money, Finance, and Development (59) ISS, The Hague, The Netherlands.
- Vos
- 1994
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Citation Context ...equilibrium analyses in the Dutch disease literature are static, and do notscapture real exchange rate dynamics or long-run structural effects of the boom (see forsinstance Benjamin et al., 1989, and =-=Vos, 1998-=-). As illustrated theoretically by Torvik (2001),sproductivity effects following a resource boom generate real depreciation after the initialsappreciation of the real exchange rate, with further impli... |
25 | 2005) ”Optimal Dutch disease - Matsen, Torvik |
24 | Real and monetary determinants of the real exchange rate - Aron, Elbadawi, et al. - 2000 |
24 | Inequality in South Africa: Nature, Causes and Responses’, Paper prepared for DfID - Gelb - 2003 |
21 | Growth, Trade, and Deindustrialization. - Rowthorn - 1999 |
17 | human capital and growth: evidence from a middle income country case study applying dynamic heterogeneous panel analysis - Fedderke |
16 | Commodity currencies and empirical exchange rate puzzles.” DNB Staff Reports 76. Netherlands Central Bank. - Chen, Rogoff - 2003 |
15 | Four sources of ̒de-industrialisation̕ and a new concept of the ̒dutch disease̕. In José Antonio Ocampo (Ed.), Beyond reforms: Structural dynamics and macroeconomic vulnerability (pp. 71–117 - Palma - 2005 |
15 | Technology Adoption and Multiple Growth Paths: An Intertemporal General Equilibrium Analysis of the Catch-up - Stokke - 2004 |
14 | Are rich countries immune to the resource curse? Evidence from Norway’s managment of its oil riches. Discussion paper no - Larsen, E - 2003 |
11 | Ramsey model of barriers to growth and skill-biased income distribution - Rattsø, Stokke - 2005 |
10 | Learning by exporting and structural change: A Ramsey growth model of Thailand - Diao, Rattsø, et al. - 2006 |
10 | The Barrier Model of Productivity Growth: South Africa’, Trade and Industry Policy Strategies Working Paper - Harding, Rattso - 2005 |
5 | Keynes, Cocoa and Copper - Cashin, Cespedes, et al. - 2002 |
5 |
The mining sector
- Jones
- 2002
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Citation Context ...5, while section 6 offers concluding remarks.s2. The South African experiencesSouth Africa is a mining dependent economy and the world’s leading producer of gold withs55% of world production in 1980 (=-=Jones, 2002a-=-)3. Mining exports accounted for more thanshalf of total export earnings in the 1970s and 80s and still about 40% in the 1990s (Fedderke,s2002b). Because of this high dependence on mining, and gold in... |
5 | Economic openness, trade restrictions and external shocks: Modelling short run effects in Sub-Saharan Africa. Economic Modelling 15 - Rattsø, Torvik - 1998 |
4 | The manufacturing industry - Bell, Madula - 2002 |
4 | An Input–Output Analysis of The Impact Of Mining On The South African Economy. - STILWELL - 2000 |
3 | The role of mining in the South African economy - Fedderke, Pirouz |
2 | capital accumulation, and economic reform in South - Jenkins |
1 | The decline of the South African economy. Edward Elgar Publishing Limited - Jones, 2002b |
1 | The real exchange rate and phasing in of oil revenues - Torvik - 2004 |