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E-book
Author Medina, Leandro, author

Title The dynamic effects of commodity prices on fiscal performance in Latin America / prepared by Leandro Medina
Published [Washington, D.C.] : International Monetary Fund, ©2010

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Description 1 online resource (27 pages) : color illustrations
Series IMF working paper ; WP/10/192
IMF working paper ; WP/10/192
Contents Cover Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; I. Introduction; 1. Country-Specific Commodity Price Indices; 2. Commodity-Related Fiscal Revenues; 3. Contribution of Commodity Price Shocks to the Variance of Primary Expenditure Growth; II. Commodity Prices And Their Dynamic Impact On Fiscal Positions: Methodology; A. Vector Autoregression Approach; B. Data; 1. The Importance of Commodity Exports; 2. Composition of Country-Specific Commodity Price Indices; III. Results; A. The dynamic responses of fiscal variables to commodity price shocks
4. Response of Commodity Prices to One Standard Cholesky Innovation in5. Accumulated Response of Commodity Prices to One Standard Cholesky; 6. Accumulated Response of Primary Expenditures to One Standard Cholesky; 7. Accumulated Response of Total Revenues to One Standard Cholesky; 8. Accumulated Response of GDP to Commodity Price One Standard Cholesky; 3. Commodity Price Shocks as a Source of Fluctuations in Primary Expenditures; 4. Sample Period by Country; 5. Responses to Commodity Price Shocks; B. Looking at fiscal rules; IV. Conclusion; Appendix 1. Data; References; Footnotes
Summary The recent boom and bust in commodity prices has raised concerns about the impact of volatile commodity prices on Latin American countries' fiscal positions. Using a novel quarterly data set-which includes unique country-specific commodity price indices and a comprehensive measure of public expenditures-this paper analyzes the dynamic effects of commodity price fluctuations on fiscal revenues and expenditures for eight commodity-exporting Latin American countries. The results indicate that Latin American countries' fiscal positions react strongly to shocks to commodity prices, yet there are marked differences across countries. Fiscal variables in Venezuela display the highest sensitivity to commodity price shocks, with expenditures reacting significantly more than revenues. At the other end of the spectrum, in Chile expenditure reacts very little to commodity price fluctuations, and the dynamic responses of its fiscal indicators are very similar to those seen in high-income commodity-exporting countries. This distinct behavior across countries may relate to institutional arrangements, which in some cases include the efficient application of fiscal rules amid political commitment and high standards of transparency
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 12-13)
Notes Print version record
Subject Primary commodities -- Prices -- Latin America -- Econometric models
Prices -- Latin America -- Econometric models
Commodity exchanges -- Latin America -- Econometric models
Fiscal policy -- Latin America -- Econometric models
Commodity exchanges -- Econometric models
Fiscal policy -- Econometric models
Prices -- Econometric models
Primary commodities -- Prices -- Econometric models
Latin America
Form Electronic book
Author International Monetary Fund. Western Hemisphere Department, issuing body
ISBN 9781455206162
1455206164
1282846639
9781282846630
1462313353
9781462313358
9786612846632
6612846631
1455202266
9781455202263