000 02964nam a2200277 a 4500
003 arcduce
005 20120731113355.0
008 100308s1991 dcu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a0-8213-1969-8
040 _aarcduce
082 _a332.491724
090 _c16816
_d16816
245 _aMonetary policy instruments for developing countries
_c/ edited by Gerard Caprio Jr., Patrick Honohan, Patrick
260 _bWorld Bank
_aWashington, D.C.
_c1991
300 _ax, 137 p. :
_bil.
490 _aA World Bank Symposium
505 _a1. The use of market instruments for monetary policy / Gerard Caprio, Jr. and Patrick Honohan -- Pt. 1. Nuts and bolts: practical issues on moving to indirect implementation of monetary policy -- 2. Central Bank liquidity, management and the money market -- 3. The use of monetary policy instruments by developing countries / R. Barry Johnston -- 4. Building financial institutions for a market-based monetary policy / Steven Grenville -- Pte. 2. Monetary targeting and control -- 5. Monetary targeting: lessons form the U.S experience / David Lindsey -- 6. Monetary targets: european experience / Charles Goodhart -- Pte. 3. Budget deficits and monetary policy -- 7. Impact of government deficits on monetary policy: the case of Italy -- 8. Impact of government deficits on monetary policy: the case of Chile / Juan Andres Fontaine -- 9. Monetary management with high inflation: the brazilian experience / Carlos Alberto Queiroz -- Pt. 4. The interaction of exchange rate and monetary policy -- 10. Exchange rate policy / Charles Freedman -- 11. Interation of exchange rate policy and monetary policy: the case of Malaysia / Lin See Yan.
520 _aRapid structural change and widespread adoption of financial sector reforms in developing countries have placed pressure on traditional instruments of monetary control. It is widely accepted that, if the necessary macroeconomic control can be maintained, a move to an indirect, market-oriented system of monetary policy instruments will help the financial sector perform in a sounder and more efficient manner, resulting in the maximum contribution to economic development. With these developments in mind, the Financial Policy and Systems Division of the World Bank organized a seminar in May, 1990, which brought together experts from industrial and middle income countries, together with some of the Bank ' s own financial sector specialists and those of the International Monetary Fund, to discuss the lessons of recent experience with indirect methods of monetary control. This volume reports the edited proceedings of the seminar and will be of value to policy makers and students of developing countries.
650 _aPOLITICA MONETARIA
650 _aMERCADO MONETARIO
653 _aSUSTITUCION DE LA MONEDA
700 _aCaprio, Gerard, Jr., ed.
700 _aHonohan, Patrick, ed.
710 _aBanco Mundial
942 _cLIBR
_j332.491724 C 47736
999 _c16787
_d16787