<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:wbfeed="http://www.worldbank.org/isp/"><wbfeed:name>Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth</wbfeed:name><wbfeed:date>Fri May 24 06:00:53 EDT 2013</wbfeed:date><wbfeed:host>w1es1000.worldbank.org</wbfeed:host><title type="text">Policy Research Working Paper | Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth | World Bank</title><link href="http://econ.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTDEC/0,,menuPK:577938~pagePK:64165265~piPK:64165423~theSitePK:469372,00.html"></link><subtitle type="html">Policy Research Working Paper on Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth, from the World Bank</subtitle><entry><title type="text">A model of gendered production in colonial Africa and implications for development in the post-colonial period</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130508154842&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper proposes a model to analyze the implications of colonial policies for gender inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa. The model emphasizes segmentation of production under complete specialization. It shows that the colonial production model, underpinned by occupational job segregation in the agricultural sector and gender bias in the non-agricultural sector, exacerbated gender inequality by limiting employment opportunities for women outside the realm of home production and subsistence agriculture. Over the past few decades, the resilience of parameters underlying these models of colonial production has heightened the risks of macroeconomic volatility in the region, especially where the structural transformation from low to high-value-added activities has remained elusive.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130508154842&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-08T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-08T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Gender|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Health, Nutrition and Population|Rural Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Economic Theory &amp; Research|Labor Policies|Rural Development Knowledge &amp; Information Systems|Gender and Development|Population Policies</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>Africa</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Fofack, Hippolyte</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>A model of gendered production in colonial Africa and implications for development in the post-colonial period</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>Africa</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Gender|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Health, Nutrition and Population|Rural Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Economic Theory &amp; Research|Labor Policies|Rural Development Knowledge &amp; Information Systems|Gender and Development|Population Policies</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6438</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>Africa</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>Africa</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">A "greenprint" for international cooperation on climate change</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130513085415&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">International negotiations on climate change have been dogged by mutual recriminations between rich and poor countries, constricted by the zero-sum arithmetic of a shrinking global carbon budget, and overtaken by shifts in economic power between industrialized and developing countries. To overcome these "narrative," "adding-up," and "new world" problems, respectively, this paper proposes a new Greenprint for cooperation. First, the large dynamic emerging economies -- China, India, Brazil, and Indonesia -- must assume the mantle of leadership, offering contributions of their own and prodding the reluctant industrial countries into action. This role reversal would be consistent with the greater stakes for the dynamic emerging economies. Second, the emphasis must be on technology generation. This would allow greater consumption and production possibilities for all countries while respecting the global emissions budget that is dictated by the climate change goal of keeping average temperature rise below 2 degrees centigrade. Third, instead of the old cash-for-cuts approach -- which relies on the industrial countries offering cash (which they do not have) to the dynamic emerging economies for cuts (that they are unwilling to make) -- all major emitters must make contributions. With a view to galvanizing a technology revolution, industrial countries would take early action to raise carbon prices. The dynamic emerging economies would in turn eliminate fossil fuel subsidies, commit to matching carbon price increases in the future, allow limited border taxes against their own exports, and strengthen protection of intellectual property for green technologies. This would directly and indirectly facilitate such a technological revolution.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130513085415&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-13T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-13T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Energy</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Climate Change Mitigation and Green House Gases|Climate Change Economics|Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Energy Production and Transportation|Carbon Policy and Trading</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>East Asia and Pacific|South Asia|Latin America &amp; Caribbean</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Mattoo, Aaditya|Subramanian, Arvind</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>A "greenprint" for international cooperation on climate change</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>China|India|Brazil|Indonesia</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Energy</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Climate Change Mitigation and Green House Gases|Climate Change Economics|Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Energy Production and Transportation|Carbon Policy and Trading</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6440</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>China|India|Brazil|Indonesia</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>East Asia and Pacific|South Asia|Latin America &amp; Caribbean</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Bank competition, concentration, and credit reporting</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130513115630&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper explores the empirical relationship between bank competition, bank concentration, and the emergence of credit reporting institutions. The authors find that countries with lower entry barriers into the banking market (that is, a greater threat of competition) are less likely to have a credit bureau, presumably because banks are less willing to share proprietary information when the threat of market entry is high. In addition, a credit bureau is significantly less likely to emerge in economies characterized by a high degree of bank concentration. The authors argue that the reason for this finding is that large banks stand to lose more monopoly rents from sharing their extensive information with smaller players. In contrast, the data show no significant relationship between bank competition or concentration and the emergence of a public credit registry, where banks' participation is mandatory. The results highlight that policies designed to promote the voluntary creation of a credit bureau need to take into account banks' incentives to extract monopoly rents from proprietary credit information.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130513115630&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-13T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-13T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Access to Finance|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress|Debt Markets|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Bruhn, Miriam|Farazi, Subika|Kanz, Martin</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Bank competition, concentration, and credit reporting</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Access to Finance|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress|Debt Markets|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6442</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Biodiversity and national accounting</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130513092815&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">Biodiversity, a property of natural areas, provides a range of benefits to the economy including bioprospecting rents, knowledge and insurance, ecotourism fees, and ecosystem services. Many of these values can be broken out in the System of National Accounts, leading to better estimates of the economic losses when natural areas are degraded or destroyed. Developing countries harbor the great majority of biodiversity, and this diversity provides benefits, including knowledge and carbon sequestration, to the whole world. However, protecting biodiversity is particularly costly for developing countries: the opportunity cost of foregoing development of natural areas exceeds 1 percent of gross domestic product in 58 developing countries, versus only four OECD countries. The Global Environment Facility can offset these costs through grant finance, but annual Global Environment Facility finance and co-finance averages only 8 percent of the opportunity costs faced by low-income countries.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130513092815&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-13T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-13T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Biodiversity|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Ecosystems and Natural Habitats</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Hamilton. Kirk</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Biodiversity and national accounting</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Biodiversity|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Ecosystems and Natural Habitats</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6441</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Productivity growth in Europe</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130514095136&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper tests whether structural or firm-specific characteristics contributed more to (labor) productivity growth in the European Union between 2003 and 2008. It combines the Amadeus firm-level data on productivity and firm characteristics with country-level data describing regulatory environments from the World Bank's Doing Business surveys, foreign direct investment data from Eurostat, infrastructure quality assessments from the Global Competitiveness Report, and credit availability from the World Development Indicators. It finds that among the 12 newest members of the European Union, country characteristics are most important for firm productivity growth, particularly the stock of inward foreign direct investment and the availability of credit. By contrast, among the more developed 15 elder European Union member countries, firm-level characteristics, such as industry, size, and international affiliation, are most important for growth. The quality of the regulatory environment, measured by Doing Business indicators, is importantly correlated with productivity growth in all cases. This finding suggests that European Union nations can realize significant benefits from improving regulations and encouraging inward and outward foreign direct investment.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130514095136&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-14T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-14T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Environment|Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>E-Business|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Microfinance</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Dall'Olio, Andrea|Iootty, Mariana|Kanehira, Naoto|Saliola, Federica</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Productivity growth in Europe</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>Europe</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Environment|Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>E-Business|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Microfinance</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6425</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>Europe</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Farther on down the road : transport costs, trade and urban growth in Sub-Saharan Africa</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130515084353&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">Transport costs are widely considered an important barrier to local economic activity but their impact in developing countries is not well-studied. This paper investigates the role of inter-city transport costs in determining the income of Sub-Saharan African cities, using two new data sources. Specifically, it asks how important access to a large port city is for the income of hinterland cities in 15 countries. Satellite data on lights at night proxy for city economic activity, and shortest routes between cities are calculated using new road network data. Cost per unit of distance is identified by world oil prices. The results show that an oil price increase of the magnitude experienced between 2002 and 2008 induces the income of cities near a major port to increase by 6 percent relative to otherwise identical cities 500 kilometers farther away. Cities connected to the port by paved roads are chiefly affected by transport costs to the port, while cities connected to the port by unpaved roads are more affected by connections to secondary centers. These are important findings for economic development in Sub-Saharan Africa since the majority of its population growth over the next few decades is expected to be in urban areas.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130515084353&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-15T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-15T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Transport|Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Rural Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Transport Economics Policy &amp; Planning|Rural Roads &amp; Transport|Subnational Economic Development|E-Business|Roads &amp; Highways</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>Africa</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Storeygard, Adam</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Farther on down the road : transport costs, trade and urban growth in Sub-Saharan Africa</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>Africa</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Transport|Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Rural Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Transport Economics Policy &amp; Planning|Rural Roads &amp; Transport|Subnational Economic Development|E-Business|Roads &amp; Highways</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6444</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>Africa</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>Africa</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Poverty reduction during the rural-urban transformation : the role of the missing middle</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130515085810&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">As countries develop, they restructure away from agriculture and urbanize. But structural transformation and urbanization patterns differ substantially, with some countries fostering migration out of agriculture into rural off farm activities and secondary towns, and others undergoing rapid agglomeration in mega cities. Using cross-country panel data for developing countries spanning 1980-2004, the analysis in this paper finds that migration out of agriculture into the missing middle (the rural nonfarm economy and secondary towns) yields more inclusive growth patterns and faster poverty reduction than agglomeration in mega cities. This suggests that patterns of urbanization deserve much more attention when striving for faster poverty reduction. &lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130515085810&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-15T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-15T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Information and Communication Technologies|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Rural Poverty Reduction|Achieving Shared Growth|Regional Economic Development|ICT Applications</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Christiaensen, Luc|Todo, Yasuyuki</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Poverty reduction during the rural-urban transformation : the role of the missing middle</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Information and Communication Technologies|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Rural Poverty Reduction|Achieving Shared Growth|Regional Economic Development|ICT Applications</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6445</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Jobs, wellbeing, and social cohesion : evidence from value and perception surveys</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130516150306&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">Recent events, including the Arab Revolutions and protest movement of unemployed youths in OECD countries, have contributed to the popular sentiment that access to good jobs is an important driver of social cohesion. While economic dimensions of labor market outcomes are relatively well documented, evidence on the link between social cohesion and employment conditions is still surprisingly scarce. This paper, a background report for the WDR 2013 on Jobs, presents descriptive evidence that illustrates possible linkages between labor market outcomes and social cohesion. The findings suggest that, once one passes the threshold from low to lower middle income countries, formal employment emerges as a determinant of a range of outcomes relating to social cohesion, such as membership in social associations or levels of political activism. There are also indications of an increasing association between work and life satisfaction across higher and lower middle income countries. The paper concludes with a discussion of the study's implications for emerging economies whose labor market and social institutions are still in transition.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130516150306&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-16T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-16T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Labor Policies|Labor Markets|Markets and Market Access|Inequality|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Wietzke, Frank-Borge|McLeod, Catriona</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Jobs, wellbeing, and social cohesion : evidence from value and perception surveys</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Labor Policies|Labor Markets|Markets and Market Access|Inequality|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6447</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Trade insulation as social protection</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130516154759&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">In a world with volatile food prices, countries have an incentive to shelter their populations from induced real income shocks. When some agents are net food producers while others are net consumers, there is scope for insurance between the two groups. A domestic social protection scheme would therefore transfer resources away from the former group to the latter in times of high food prices, and do the reverse otherwise. This paper shows that in the presence of consumer preference heterogeneity, implementing the optimal social protection policy can potentially induce higher food price volatility. Such policy indeed generates a counter-cyclical demand shock that amplifies the effects of the underlying food shortage. The results call for a reassessment of food stabilization policies. In particular, the authors urge caution against the systematic condemnation of trade insulation practices.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130516154759&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-16T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-16T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Agriculture|Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Industry</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Food &amp; Beverage Industry|Emerging Markets|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Markets and Market Access|Food Security</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Do, Quy-Toan|Levchenko, Andrei A.|Ravallion, Martin</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Trade insulation as social protection</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Agriculture|Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Industry</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Food &amp; Beverage Industry|Emerging Markets|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Markets and Market Access|Food Security</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6448</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">The inequality possibility frontier :  extensions and new applications</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130517111945&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper extends the Inequality Possibility Frontier approach in two methodological directions. It allows the social minimum to increase with the average income of a society, and it derives all the Inequality Possibility Frontier statistics for two other inequality measures besides the Gini. Finally, it applies the framework to contemporary data, showing that the inequality extraction ratio can be used in the empirical analysis of post-1960 civil conflict around the world. The duration of conflict and the casualty rate are positively associated with the inequality extraction ratio, that is, with the extent to which elite pushes the actual inequality closer to its maximum level. Inequality, albeit slightly reformulated, is thus shown to play a role in explaining civil conflict. &lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130517111945&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-17T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-17T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Gender|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Inequality|Poverty Impact Evaluation|Services &amp; Transfers to Poor|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Gender and Law</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Milanovic, Branko</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>The inequality possibility frontier :  extensions and new applications</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Gender|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Inequality|Poverty Impact Evaluation|Services &amp; Transfers to Poor|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Gender and Law</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6449</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Drawing a roadmap for oil pricing reform</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130520093401&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">In 2011, the median oil imports rose to 5 percent of gross domestic product for net importers. In the past several years, many governments have not passed through the world oil price increases to consumers fully. As a sign of divergent pricing policies, the retail prices of gasoline, diesel, and cooking gas in January 2013 varied by a factor of 190, 250, and 70, respectively, across developing countries. Policies to keep oil product prices low to benefit the economy and protect the poor have had a number of unintended negative consequences, including flourishing corruption in the oil sector and entrenchment of monopoly operators or inefficient firms through which subsidies are channeled, stifling competition and raising costs. The path to market-based pricing depends on the starting conditions: the gap between current and market-based price levels, the level of public awareness about the extent of departure from market prices, the degree of market concentration and competition in downstream oil, the subsidy delivery mechanism where subsidies are provided, the robustness of social service delivery, and the perceived credibility of the government. The evidence presented in this paper suggests that pricing reform often does not have a clear end and should instead be viewed as a continuous process of adjustment and search for mechanisms that take into account the country's institutions and political system, and the oil sector's market structure, infrastructure, and history.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130520093401&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|International Economics and Trade|Energy</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Markets and Market Access|Energy Production and Transportation|Access to Markets|Emerging Markets|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Kojima, Masami</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Drawing a roadmap for oil pricing reform</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|International Economics and Trade|Energy</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Markets and Market Access|Energy Production and Transportation|Access to Markets|Emerging Markets|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6450</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Micro dynamics of Turkey's export boom in the 2000s</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130520114630&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper examines the microeconomics behind the dramatic export boom experienced by Turkey during the 2000s. Using disaggregated customs data covering the universe of export transactions for Turkey during the period 2002-2011, it characterizes firm-level dynamics in the export sector and decomposes export growth at the aggregate, sector, and destination market levels to identify the role of firm turnover, destination turnover, and product turnover. The paper shows that in the short-run, aggregate export growth is dominated by growth in continuous exporters, and for these, growth is dominated by exports to their continued destinations and of their continued products. However, the observed high degree of churning across firms, destinations, and products accounts in the long run for a substantial part of Turkey's export growth. The patterns of micro-dynamics of export growth are verified across sectors and across groups of destination markets with some exceptions regarding exports to new emerging markets where net entry by Turkish-based exporters plays a more critical role for long-run growth.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130520114630&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|International Economics and Trade|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Debt Markets|Export Competitiveness|Free Trade|Currencies and Exchange Rates|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Cebeci, Tolga|Fernandes, Ana M.</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Micro dynamics of Turkey's export boom in the 2000s</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>Turkey</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|International Economics and Trade|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Debt Markets|Export Competitiveness|Free Trade|Currencies and Exchange Rates|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6452</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>Turkey</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Non-farm diversification, poverty, economic mobility and income inequality :  a case study in village India</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130520094922&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper assembles data at the all-India level and for the village of Palanpur, Uttar Pradesh, to document the growing importance, and influence, of the non-farm sector in the rural economy between the early 1980s and late 2000s. The suggestion from the combined National Sample Survey and Palanpur data is of a slow process of non-farm diversification, whose distributional incidence, on the margin, is increasingly pro-poor.  The village-level analysis documents that the non-farm sector is not only increasing incomes and reducing poverty, but appears as well to be breaking down long-standing barriers to mobility among the poorest segments of rural society.  Efforts by the government of India to accelerate the process of diversification could thus yield significant returns in terms of declining poverty and increased income mobility. The evidence from Palanpur also shows, however, that at the village-level a significant increase in income inequality has accompanied diversification away from the farm.  A growing literature argues that such a rise in inequality could affect the fabric of village society, the way in which village institutions function and evolve, and the scope for collective action at the village level.  Failure to keep such inequalities in check could thus undermine the pro-poor impacts from the process of structural transformation currently underway in rural India.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130520094922&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Rural Poverty Reduction|Regional Economic Development|Inequality|Labor Markets</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>South Asia</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Himanshu|Lanjouw, Peter|Murgai, Rinku|Stern, Nicholas</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Non-farm diversification, poverty, economic mobility and income inequality :  a case study in village India</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>India</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Rural Poverty Reduction|Regional Economic Development|Inequality|Labor Markets</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6451</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>India</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>South Asia</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">The effect of biodiesel policies on world oilseed markets and developing countries</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130520130118&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">Using an empirical model, this study provides some insights into the functioning of the oilseed-biodiesel-diesel market complex in a large country that determines the biodiesel price, reflecting market equilibrium changes resulting from volatility in the crude oil price. Oilseed crushing produces joint products -- oil and meal -- and this weakens the link between the biodiesel and oilseed feedstock prices. Higher crude oil prices increase biodiesel prices if biofuel benefits from a fuel tax exemption, but lower them with a blending mandate (minimum biofuel content requirement in marketed fuel). When both canola and soybeans are used to produce biodiesel, an increase in the crude oil price leads to higher canola prices, but the effect on soybean prices is ambiguous and depends on relative elasticities of meal demand and canola supply because canola produces more oil than soybeans. An oil price shock with a blending mandate results in a smaller change in oilseed prices compared with a fuel tax exemption. Jumps in world crude oil prices have differential impacts on commodity prices and welfare in developing countries, depending on which policy determines the biodiesel price in OECD countries.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130520130118&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-20T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Industry|Energy</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Energy Production and Transportation|Markets and Market Access|Renewable Energy|Oil Refining &amp; Gas Industry|Emerging Markets</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>de Gorter, Harry|Drabik, Dusan|Timilsina, Govinda R.</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>The effect of biodiesel policies on world oilseed markets and developing countries</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Industry|Energy</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Energy Production and Transportation|Markets and Market Access|Renewable Energy|Oil Refining &amp; Gas Industry|Emerging Markets</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6453</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Long-term drivers of food prices</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130521131725&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">It is becoming increasingly apparent that the post-2004, across-the-board, commodity price increases, which initially appeared to be a spike similar to the ones experienced during the early 1950s (Korean War) and the 1970s (oil crises), have a more permanent character. From 1997-2004 to 2005-12 nominal prices of energy, fertilizers, and precious metals tripled, metal prices went up by more than 150 percent, and most food prices doubled. Such price increases, especially in food commodities, not only fueled a debate on their key causes, but also alarmed government officials, leading to calls for coordinated policy actions. This paper examines the relative contribution of various sector and macroeconomic drivers to price changes of five food commodities (maize, wheat, rice, soybeans, and palm oil) by applying a reduced-form econometric model on 1960-2012 annual data. The drivers include stock-to-use ratios, crude oil and manufacturing prices, the United States dollar exchange rate, interest rate, and income. Based on long-run elasticity estimates (approximately -0.25 for the stock-to-use ratios, 0.25 for the oil price, -1.25 for the exchange rate, and much less for others), the paper estimates the contribution of these drivers to food price increases from 1997-2004 to 2005-12. It concludes that most of the price increases are accounted for by crude oil prices (more than 50 percent), followed by stock-to-use ratios and exchange rate movements, which are estimated at about 15 percent each. Crude oil prices mattered most during the recent boom period because they experienced the largest increase.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130521131725&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-21T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-21T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Industry|Energy</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Markets and Market Access|Emerging Markets|Food &amp; Beverage Industry|Climate Change Economics|Energy Production and Transportation</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Baffes, John|Dennis, Allen</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Long-term drivers of food prices</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Industry|Energy</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Markets and Market Access|Emerging Markets|Food &amp; Beverage Industry|Climate Change Economics|Energy Production and Transportation</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6455</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Structural change, dualism and economic development : the role of the vulnerable poor on marginal lands</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130522110442&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">Empirical evidence indicates that in many developing regions, the extreme poor in more marginal land areas form a "residual" pool of rural labor. Structural transformation in such developing economies depends crucially on labor and land use decisions of these most-vulnerable populations located on abundant but marginal agricultural land. Although the modern sector may be the source of dynamic growth through learning-by-doing and knowledge spillovers, patterns of labor, land and other natural resources use in the rural economy matter in the overall dynamics of structural change. The concentration of the rural poor on marginal lands is essentially a barometer of economy-wide development. As long as there are abundant marginal lands for cultivation, they serve to absorb rural migrants, increased population, and displaced unskilled labor from elsewhere in the economy. Moreover, the economy is vulnerable to the "Dutch disease" effects of a booming primary products sector. As a consequence, productivity increases and expansion in the commercial primary production sector will cause manufacturing employment and output to contract, until complete specialization occurs. Avoiding such an outcome and combating the inherent dualism of the economy requires both targeted polices for the modern sector and traditional agriculture on marginal lands.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130522110442&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-22T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-22T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Poverty Reduction|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Rural Poverty Reduction|Economic Growth</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Barbier, Edward B.</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Structural change, dualism and economic development : the role of the vulnerable poor on marginal lands</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Poverty Reduction|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Environmental Economics &amp; Policies|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Economic Theory &amp; Research|Rural Poverty Reduction|Economic Growth</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6456</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">The labor market impact of mobility restrictions : evidence from the West Bank</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130522112115&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">Using data on Israeli closures inside the West Bank, this paper provides new evidence on the labor market effects of conflict-induced restrictions to mobility. To identify the effects, the analysis exploits the fact that the placement of physical barriers by Israel was exogenous to local labor market conditions and uses a measure of conflict intensity to control for the likely spurious correlation between local unrest, labor market conditions, and the placement of barriers. The study finds that these barriers to mobility have a significant negative effect on employment, wages, and days worked per month. The barriers had a positive impact on the number of hours per working day. These effects are driven mainly by checkpoints while other barriers, such as roadblocks and earth mounds, have a much more limited impact. Only a tiny portion of the effects is due to direct restrictions on workers' mobility, suggesting that these restrictions affect the labor market mainly by depressing firms' production and labor demand. Despite being an underestimation of the actual effects, the overall costs of the barriers on the West Bank labor market are substantial: in 2007, for example, these costs amounted to 6 percent of gross domestic product. Most of these costs are due to lower wages, thus suggesting that the labor market has adjusted to the restrictions more through prices than quantities.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130522112115&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-22T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-22T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Transport|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Labor Markets|Labor Policies|Transport Economics Policy &amp; Planning|Markets and Market Access|Banks &amp; Banking Reform</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>Middle East and North Africa</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Cali, Massimiliano|Miaari, Sami H.</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>The labor market impact of mobility restrictions : evidence from the West Bank</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>West Bank and Gaza</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Transport|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Social Protections and Labor|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Labor Markets|Labor Policies|Transport Economics Policy &amp; Planning|Markets and Market Access|Banks &amp; Banking Reform</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6457</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>West Bank and Gaza</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>Middle East and North Africa</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">How to move the exchange rate if you must: the diverse practice of foreign exchange intervention by central banks and a proposal for doing it better</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130523172511&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">The paper is about the art of exchange rate management by central banks. It begins by reviewing the diversity of objectives and practices of central bank intervention in the foreign exchange market. Central banks typically exercise discretion in determining when and to what extent to intervene. Some central banks use publicly declared rules of intervention, with the aim of increasing visibility and strengthening the signaling channel of policy. There is tentative evidence that the volatility of foreign exchange reserves is comparatively lower in emerging market economies where central banks follow some form of rules-based foreign exchange intervention. The paper goes on to argue that when the foreign exchange market includes some large strategic participants, the central bank can achieve superior outcomes if intervention takes the form of a rule, or "schedule," indicating commitments to buying and selling different quantities of foreign currency conditional on the exchange rate. Exchange rate management and reserve management can then be treated as two independent objectives by the central bank. In line with the stylized facts reviewed, this would enable a central bank to pursue exchange rate objectives with minimum reserve changes, or achieve reserve targets with minimum impact on the exchange rate. &lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130523172511&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-23T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-23T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Debt Markets|Emerging Markets|Currencies and Exchange Rates|Economic Stabilization|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Basu, Kaushik|Varoudakis, Aristomene</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>How to move the exchange rate if you must: the diverse practice of foreign exchange intervention by central banks and a proposal for doing it better</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Private Sector Development|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Debt Markets|Emerging Markets|Currencies and Exchange Rates|Economic Stabilization|Economic Theory &amp; Research</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6460</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">The poverty impact of climate change in Mexico</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130523174135&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper examines the effects of climate change on poverty through the relationship between indicators of climate change (temperature and rainfall change) and municipal level gross domestic product, and subsequently between gross domestic product and poverty. The evidence suggests that climate change could have a negative impact on poverty by 2030. The paper proposes a two-stage least squares regression where it first regresses temperature and rainfall (along with geographic controls and state and year fixed effects) on municipal gross domestic product per capita for 2000 and 2005 The resulting gross domestic product per capita is used in a second equation to estimate municipal poverty on the same years. The authors then incorporate projections of temperature and rainfall changes by 2030 into the estimated climate-gross domestic product coefficients to assess the effects of climate change in economic activity and how this in turn will influence poverty. At the same time, they account for the potential adaptive capacity of municipalities through higher population densities and economic growth. Both would reduce poverty by 31.72 percentage points between 2005 and 2030 with changing climate. However, poverty could have been reduced up to 34.15 percentage points over the same period had there been no climate change. This suggests that climate change slows down the pace of poverty reduction. An alternative reading is that poverty is expected to increase from 15.25 percent (without climate change) to 17.68 percent (with climate change) by 2030. Given the existing population projections for 2030, this represents 2,902,868 people remaining in poverty as a result of climate change. &lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130523174135&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-23T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-23T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Poverty Reduction|Science and Technology Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Science of Climate Change|Climate Change Mitigation and Green House Gases|Climate Change Economics|Regional Economic Development|Rural Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>Latin America &amp; Caribbean</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>de la Fuente, Alejandro|Villarroel, Marcelo Olivera</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>The poverty impact of climate change in Mexico</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>Mexico</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Environment|Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Poverty Reduction|Science and Technology Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Science of Climate Change|Climate Change Mitigation and Green House Gases|Climate Change Economics|Regional Economic Development|Rural Poverty Reduction</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6461</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>Mexico</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>Latin America &amp; Caribbean</wbfeed:regions></entry><entry><title type="text">Credit-less recoveries : neither a rare nor an insurmountable challenge</title><link href="http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagePK=64193027&amp;piPK=64187937&amp;theSitePK=523679&amp;menuPK=64187510&amp;searchMenuPK=64187511&amp;entityID=000158349_20130524011938&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth"></link><summary type="html">This paper examines why some countries experience economic recoveries without pick-up of bank credit (credit-less) and how different this recovery pattern is from the case where credit is increased as an economy recovers (credit-with). To answer these questions, the paper uses quarterly data covering 96 countries and identifies 272 recovery episodes. It finds that more than 25 percent of all recoveries are credit-less and around 45 percent of all credit-less recoveries occurred in 2009-10. It also finds that output and investment growth tends to be lower in credit-less events but, by eight quarters after the trough date, the gap between credit-less and credit-with episodes is mostly exhausted. Results of the probit estimations show that the size of the downturn and the extent of external adjustment are associated with the likelihood of credit-less recoveries. Moreover, fiscal loosening tends to be related to credit-less events while monetary easing and a country's decision to seek an International Monetary Fund-supported program reduce the probability of credit-less recoveries. Finally, the model suggests that many countries in the Europe and Central Asia region were likely to experience credit-less recoveries following the global financial crisis in 2008/09. What is more worrisome for them is the fact that they are facing another negative external shock.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;img src="http://wbws.worldbank.org/feeds/main/tracker.html?p=000158349_20130524011938&amp;db=doc&amp;feedName=Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth&amp;feedClass=NOT_DEFINED&amp;cid=3001_DECwps_Macroeconomics_and_Economic_Growth" height=1 width=1 border=0&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</summary><published>2013-05-24T04:00:00.000Z</published><updated>2013-05-24T04:00:00.000Z</updated><wbfeed:teraTopics>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:teraTopics><wbfeed:subTopics>Economic Theory &amp; Research|Access to Finance|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Investment and Investment Climate|Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress</wbfeed:subTopics><wbfeed:ADMREG>The World Region|Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:ADMREG><wbfeed:AUTHR>Sugawara, Naotaka|Zalduendo, Juan</wbfeed:AUTHR><wbfeed:DOCNA>Credit-less recoveries : neither a rare nor an insurmountable challenge</wbfeed:DOCNA><wbfeed:LANG>English</wbfeed:LANG><wbfeed:COUNT>World|Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:COUNT><wbfeed:TERATOPIC>Macroeconomics and Economic Growth|Finance and Financial Sector Development</wbfeed:TERATOPIC><wbfeed:SUBTOPIC>Economic Theory &amp; Research|Access to Finance|Banks &amp; Banking Reform|Investment and Investment Climate|Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress</wbfeed:SUBTOPIC><wbfeed:REPNB>WPS6459</wbfeed:REPNB><wbfeed:countries>World|Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:countries><wbfeed:languages>English</wbfeed:languages><wbfeed:DOCTY>Policy Research Working Paper</wbfeed:DOCTY><wbfeed:regions>The World Region|Europe and Central Asia</wbfeed:regions></entry></feed>