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UNU-WIDER Macroeconomic Management of Increased Aid: Policy Lessons from Recent Experience

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The Macroeconomic Management of Increased Aid: Policy Lessons from Recent Experience

This paper investigates the macroeconomic challenges created by a surge in aid inflows. It develops an analytical framework for examining possible policy responses to increased aid, in terms of absorption and spending of aid—where the central bank controls absorption through monetary policy and the sale of foreign exchange and the fiscal authority controls spending. Different combinations of absorption and spending lead to different macroeconomic consequences. Evidence from five countries that recently experienced an aid surge (Ethiopia, Ghana, Tanzania, Mozambique and Uganda) shows no support for aid-related real exchange rate appreciation in these countries, but indicates that the fear of Dutch disease played an important part in the policy reaction to aid surges. Fiscal and monetary authorities should coordinate their responses to an aid surge, because an uncoordinated response—typically when fiscal authority wants to spend aid while the central bank wants to avoid exchange rate appreciation—can have serious negative macroeconomic consequences.
Publisher:
UNU-WIDER
Series:
WIDER Research Paper
Volume:
2008/79
Title:
The Macroeconomic Management of Increased Aid: Policy Lessons from Recent Experience
Authors:
Shekhar Aiyar, Andrew Berg, and Mumtaz Hussain
Publication date:
September 2008
ISSN Web:
1810-2611
ISBN 13 Web:
9789292301330
Copyright holder:
© UNU-WIDER
Copyright year:
2008
Keywords:
aid, exchange rate, aid absorption, policy
JEL:
O11, O23, E52, F35
Project:
Conference on 'Aid: Principles, Policies and Performance'
Sponsor:
UNU-WIDER gratefully acknowledges the financial contribution to the conference by the Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs.
Format:
online

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