LCR Crisis Briefs

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This series investigates the impact of the financial crisis on the Latin America and the Caribbean Region (LCR).

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication
    Severity of the Crisis and its Transmission Channels
    (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2009-12) Calderon, Cesar; Didier, Tatiana
    The current global crisis, although initially circumscribed to the US housing market, spread rapidly across markets and borders. It has affected almost all countries through different reinforcing channels: the contraction in international trade, capital flows, remittances, and international commodity prices. The main goal of this note is to empirically analyze the mechanisms through which the financial crisis of 2007-2009 propagated throughout the world by characterizing the main factors behind the fall in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth rates. The findings indicate that a greater decline in the growth rate was registered in countries with higher de facto trade openness, less resilient domestic financial markets, and, to a lesser extent, improved macroeconomic frameworks. To complement this evidence, we construct an aggregate index of the severity of the crisis that captures the real and financial consequences in each country of this unprecedented global financial shock.
  • Publication
    Social Consequences of the Global Financial Crisis in Latin America : Some Preliminary, and Surprisingly Optimistic, Conjectures
    (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2009-11) Schady, Norbert; Ferreira, Francisco H.G.
    Surprisingly, the most severe economic crisis the world has seen since the great depression does not appear to have had as dramatic an impact on poverty in Latin America as might have been expected. The exceptions to this heartening assessment are the countries geographically and economically closest to the United States, chiefly Mexico. Elsewhere, although poverty statistics for 2008-09 are not yet available, the data on output, unemployment and real wages suggest relatively modest changes in poverty. There are two candidate explanations for the smaller-than-expected increases in poverty in Latin America: lower output declines, deriving from enhanced protection against external shocks; and a lower output elasticity of poverty. If the latter is indeed observed when the required data becomes available, the report conjecture that it may reflect both the lower inflation rates now prevalent in the region, and recent reforms in the social protection system. For all their faults, the social protection systems in many Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) countries now reach the poor rather than only the middle-classes. The note concludes arguing against complacency, and pointing to areas where further research; and greater policy reform and experimentation are needed.
  • Publication
    How Much Room Does Latin America and the Caribbean Have for Implementing Counter-Cyclical Fiscal Policies?
    (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2009-04) Calderón, Cesar; Fajnzylber, Pablo
    Latin America's government debt has exhibited a clear downward trend since 2003. While this has been partly due to rapidly increasing commodity prices, more sustainable fiscal policies have also been a contributing factor. In effect, in a significant break with the past, cyclically adjusted government balances have raised (fallen) in response to increases (reductions) in debt levels. However, Latin governments have continued to under?save in good times and therefore fiscal policy has remained pro-cyclical, thus weakening the ability to protect the poor and maintain infrastructure investments during bad times. Financing and institutional constraints to more counter?cyclical fiscal policies still remain in most countries. They are lowest in Chile, followed by Brazil and Colombia, and highest in Ecuador and Venezuela. Looking forward, long?term sustainability considerations cannot be ignored as decisions are made regarding the size, composition and targeting of fiscal stimulus packages.