
By Akhtar Hossain (Author)
Publisher(s): The University Press Limited (UPL)   
First Published: 2000 No. of Pages: 486 Weight (kg): 1
UPL Showroom Price: 550.00 BDT
A The recent Asian and Mexican currency crises have provided a somber lesson that in a global economic setting, the exchange rate policy, and more broadly monetary and financial policy cannot be treated in a business as usual manner. The stake is high because exchange rate policy has profound impact on current and future macroeconomic performance. This book is a modest attempt to highlight the above contention from a broad perspective for the emerging market economy of Bangladesh. The work is a research-based book, comprising a number of self-contained and interrelated essays on policy-oriented issues in exchange rate economics. Dr. Hossain discusses a number of key issues in currency devaluation with data from Bangladesh and develops a macroeconomic model along the lines of the tradable-nontradable goods approach to international macroeconomics. He analyses the movement of both the real exchange rate and trade balance in Bangladesh since the early 1970s. The author also makes an in-depth study of two politically-sensitive economic issues, viz. the economic and political events that led to the 1974 Bangladesh famine and Bangladesh’s large and growing trade deficits with India since the late-1980s. The concluding chapter reflects on dynamics of Bangladesh's politics and the present state of economic and political institutions that support economic reforms and the process of macroeconomic policymaking. Students of economics, policymakers and researchers on macroeconomic issues in developing countries and in Bangladesh will find this book useful.
This book features in: Academic and Reference Books Economics and Finance Bangladesh Studies Development Studies