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Published byClaire Francis Modified over 9 years ago
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Towards a New Consensus Analyzing Bolivian Poverty Reduction Strategies
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“It is fair to say that nobody really believes in the Washington Consensus anymore.” From: “Goodbye Washington Consensus, Hello Washington Confusion?” Dani Rodrik Harvard University January 2006
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Long wave: depressive phase Lower growth Increased unemployment Regressive redistribution Decaying “techno-economic paradigm,” or “mode of regulation” (“Fordism”) Laissez-faire, Washington Consensus policies “Real business cycles” types of economic theory
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Long wave: expansive phase Higher growth Increased employment Progressive redistribution Consolidated techno-economic paradigm Policy optimism, New Consensus (Post-)Keynesian, (post-)structuralist theory
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Changed focus From policy deconstructionism: Deregulation Decontrol Denationalization
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Changed focus To policy constructivism: Policy sovereignty Structural change Social justice (economic ethics, distributive justice)
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New focus New instruments Indebtedness policy Policy sovereignty Investment policy Structural change Income distribution policy Social justice
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Indebtedness policy: regulation of financial flows From : Cycles of massive inflows and euphoria followed by capital flight and debt crises To: Desendeudamiento and regulation of international capital flows Foreign saving = trade deficit = a knowable variable
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Investment policy: output structure matters Structure matters Natural resource exports = low growth Primary specialization = high inequality Employment intensity = poverty reduction elasticity of growth Investment policy
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Income distribution policy: tax and expenditure reform Increasing inequality in most countries during the low growth phase Latin America: Most unequal income distribution, low tax/GDP ratio, regressive tax reforms Income distribution policy
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New Consensus model Income distribution policy Investment policy Indebtedness policy Foreign debt
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Base scenario: Estrategia Boliviana de Reducción de la Pobreza ( Poverty reduction 200-2015: 5.7 points, from 50.3 percent to 44.6)
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Poverty minimizing structural change (Poverty reduction 2000-2015: 10 points, from 50.3 to 40.3 percent)
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Redistribution policies Millennium tax [and expenditure] reform: Tax rate 8.1 percent (4.6 percent of GDP) Rawlsian tax reform: Tax rate 16.7 percent (9.5 percent of GDP) Undercollection: 3.6 percent of GDP
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Millennium employment strategy Employment maximizing investment strategy Strong similarity with poverty minimization Similar GDP and poverty reduction Similar changes in output structure Stronger focus on Food staples agriculture (weaker on Small industry) Confirmed cross-country by World Bank study (Perry et al. 2006)
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