Adjustment policies, poverty, and unemployment : the IMMPA framework /
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Imprint: | Malden, MA : Blackwell Pub., 2007. |
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Description: | xii, 543 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/6250963 |
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgments
- About the Editors
- Introduction and Overview
- 1. The Analytics of Segmented Labor Markets
- 1.1. Overview of Labor Markets
- 1.1.1. Basic Structure
- 1.1.2. Composition of Employment
- 1.1.3. Public Sector Pay and Employment
- 1.1.4. Labor Market Institutions and Regulations
- 1.1.5. Unemployment
- 1.2. Urban Labor Mobility and the Harris-Todaro Framework
- 1.3. Wage Formation in the Formal Sector
- 1.3.1. Efficiency Wages
- 1.3.2. Trade Unions
- 1.3.3. Bilateral Bargaining
- 1.3.4. Job Search
- 1.3.5. Adverse Selection Models
- 1.4. A Shirking Model with Segmented Markets
- 1.4.1. The Economy
- 1.4.2. Equilibrium with Skilled Unemployment
- 1.4.3. Labor Mobility and Unskilled Unemployment
- 1.4.4. Increase in the Minimum Wage
- 1.5. Concluding Remarks
- Appendix. The Impact of a Change in the Minimum Wage
- 2. The Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction
- 2.1. A Distorted Agenda
- 2.1.1. A Topic Neglected by Macroeconomists
- 2.1.2. An Excessive Focus on Micro Aspects and Measurement Issues
- 2.13. The Confusion over "Pro-Poor Growth"
- 2.2. Transmission of Macro Shocks to the Poor
- 2.2.1. The Central Role of the Labor Market
- 2.2.2. Changes in Aggregate Demand
- 2.2.3. Expenditure Deflators and Inflation
- 2.2.4. The Real Exchange Rate and the Supply Side
- 2.2.5. Macroeconomic Volatility
- 2.2.6. Growth and Distributional Effects
- 2.2.7. Recessions and Crises: Asymmetric Effects
- 2.3. Theoretical Models for Poverty Analysis
- 2.3.1. A Two-Household Framework
- 2.3.2. Equilibrium
- 2.3.3. Cut in Government Spending
- 2.4. Some Research Directions
- 2.4.1. Poverty Traps
- 2.4.2. Asymmetric Effects of Output Shocks
- 2.4.3. Welfare Costs of Macroeconomic Volatility
- 2.4.4. Unemployment-Poverty Trade-offs
- 2.4.5. Can Redistribution Hurt the Poor?
- 2.5. Concluding Remarks
- Appendix A. Asymmetric Effects of Output Shocks
- Appendix B. Dynamic Structure and Stability Conditions
- 3. The Mini Integrated Macroeconomic Model for Poverty Analysis
- 3.1. Structure of Mini-IMMPA
- 3.1.1. Production
- 3.1.2. The Labor Market
- 3.1.3. Supply and Demand
- 3.1.4. External Trade
- 3.1.5. Prices
- 3.1.6. Profits and Income
- 3.1.7. Private Consumption and Savings
- 3.1.8. Private Investment
- 3.1.9. Public Sector
- 3.1.10. Balance of Payments
- 3.1.11. Poverty and Distributional Effects
- 3.2. Policy Experiments
- 3.2.1. Reduction in the Minimum Wage
- 3.2.2. Cut in Payroll Taxes on Unskilled Labor
- 3.3. Conclusions
- Appendix. Calibration and Parameter Values
- 4. Unemployment and Labor Market Policies in Morocco
- 4.1. The Labor Market in Morocco
- 4.1.1. Basic Structure
- 4.1.2. Employment, Unemployment, and the Returns to Education
- 4.1.3. Regulatory and Institutional Features
- 4.1.4. Wage Flexibility
- 4.1.5. Domestic and International Labor Migration
- 4.1.6. Constraints and Challenges
- 4.2. A Quantitative Framework
- 4.2.1. Production
- 4.2.2. Wages, Employment, Migration, and Skills Acquisition
- 4.2.3. Supply and Demand
- 4.2.4. External Trade
- 4.2.5. Prices
- 4.2.6. Profits and Income
- 4.2.7. Consumption, Savings, and Investment
- 4.2.8. Government
- 4.2.9. Balance of Payments
- 4.3. Policy Experiments
- 4.3.1. Cut in the Minimum Wage
- 4.3.2. Reduction in Payroll Taxes on Unskilled Labor
- 4.4. Concluding Remarks
- Appendix. Calibration and Parameter Values
- 5. The Complete IMMPA Framework for Low-Income Countries
- 5.1. Model Structure
- 5.1.1. Production
- 5.1.2. Wage Formation, Employment, Migration, and Skills Acquisition
- 5.1.3. Supply and Demand
- 5.1.4. External Trade
- 5.1.5. Prices
- 5.1.6. Profits and Income
- 5.1.7. Savings, Consumption, and Investment
- 5.1.8. Financial Sector
- 5.1.9. Public Sector
- 5.2. Poverty and Income Distribution Indicators
- 5.3. Calibration
- 5.3.1. Initial Values
- 5.3.2. Parameter Values
- 5.4. Some Illustrative Experiments
- 5.4.1. Terms-of-Trade Shock
- 5.4.2. Cut in Domestic Credit to Government
- 5.4.3. Debt Reduction and Expenditure Reallocation
- 5.5. Conclusions
- 6. Stabilization Policy, Poverty, and Unemployment in Brazil
- 6.1. An IMMPA Framework for Brazil
- 6.1.1. Production
- 6.1.2. Wages, Employment, Migration, and Skills Acquisition
- 6.1.3. Supply and Demand
- 6.1.4. External Trade
- 6.1.5. Prices
- 6.1.6. Profits and Income
- 6.1.7. Savings, Financial Wealth, and Investment
- 6.1.8. Asset Allocation and the Financial Sector
- 6.1.9. Public Sector
- 6.1.10. Balance of Payments and the Exchange Rate
- 6.1.11. Currency and Bond Market Equilibrium
- 6.2. Poverty and Income Distribution Indicators
- 6.3. Calibration and Survey Characteristics
- 6.4. Stabilization, Unemployment, and Poverty
- 6.5. Concluding Remarks
- Appendix C. Calibration and Parameter Values
- 7. Disinflation, Fiscal Sustainability, and Labor Market Adjustment in Turkey
- 7.1. Structure of the Model
- 7.1.1. Production
- 7.1.2. The Labor Market
- 7.1.3. Export Supply and Import Demand
- 7.1.4. Aggregate Supply and Demand
- 7.1.5. Profits and Income
- 7.1.6. Savings and Wealth Accumulation
- 7.1.7. Private Investment
- 7.1.8. Asset Allocation and the Credit Market
- 7.1.9. Public Sector
- 7.1.10. The Balance of Payments and the Exchange Rate
- 7.1.11. Currency and Bond Market Equilibrium
- 7.1.12. Price Determination
- 7.1.13. Default Risk, Credibility, and Expectations
- 7.2. Calibration and Solution
- 7.3. Policy Experiments
- 7.3.1. Increase in Official Interest Rates
- 7.3.2. Fiscal Adjustment
- 7.4. Concluding Remarks
- Appendix. Calibration and Parameter Values
- 8. Linking Representative Household Models with Household Surveys for Poverty Analysis: A Comparison of Alternative Methodologies
- 8.1. Macro-RHG Models and Poverty Analysis
- 8.2. Linking Income Survey Data with Macro-RHG Models
- 8.2.1. A Simple Micro-Accounting Method
- 8.2.2. An Extension with Reweighting Techniques
- 8.2.3. The Use of Distribution Functions
- 8.3. The Macro-RHG Framework
- 8.3.1. Production and the Labor Market
- 8.3.2. Composition of Demand and Prices
- 8.3.3. Profits and Income
- 8.3.4. Investment-Savings Balance
- 8.3.5. Public Sector and the Balance of Payments
- 8.4. Comparing Policy Shocks with Alternative Linkages
- 8.4.1. Reduction in the Minimum Wage
- 8.4.2. Increase in Employment Subsidies
- 8.5. Conclusions
- Appendix A. Reweighting when Using Real Survey Data
- Appendix B. Estimated Shape Parameters and Fitted Poverty Measures with Beta Distribution Functions
- 9. Some Research Perspectives
- 9.1. Labor Market Structure and Policies
- 9.2. Macroeconomic Effects of Foreign Aid
- 9.3. Public Investment, Growth, and Congestion Costs
- 9.4. Linking Macro Models and Surveys
- References