1 / 12

The Macroeconomic Challenge of Aid Volatility

The Macroeconomic Challenge of Aid Volatility. African Department International Monetary Fund. Andrew Berg Calvin McDonald. Two dimensions. Horizon: short (intra-year), medium (1-3 years), and long Agent: donors and recipients. Short-run predictability: problems.

edith
Download Presentation

The Macroeconomic Challenge of Aid Volatility

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Macroeconomic Challenge of Aid Volatility African Department International Monetary Fund Andrew Berg Calvin McDonald

  2. Two dimensions • Horizon: short (intra-year), medium (1-3 years), and long • Agent: donors and recipients.

  3. Short-run predictability: problems • Lots of volatility, even here. • Mix of reasons: sometimes country, sometimes “fickle donors”, usually in between • “innocent of what” • Program and project very different.

  4. Short-run predictability: solutions • Donors: can and are doing better • But move to budget support can make problem more acute. • Recipients should be able to smooth • IMF programs have come a ways on this • Even if IMF programs allow through adjusters, headline domestic borrowing and deficit targets can go awry.

  5. Medium-run predictability: problems • Again, lots of volatility • First principle component in a panel of aid flows explains 45 percent of the variation (Kang, et al. 2007) • Macro risks: can cause inflation, exchange rate and interest rate volatility. • Mainly because of problems of fiscal/monetary coordination. • May cause increase in size of domestically-financed public sector • Makes it hard to plan.

  6. Medium-run predictability: solutions • Donors • multi-year commitments etc. • Break link between donation and aid flow: global funds, Rethink budget support? • Recipients • Create good MTEFs, scaling up scenarios • Smooth aid • How many reserves do you need, and how costly? • Many countries have enough • Surprisingly hard to do. • Complications of exchange rate management • Separate central bank/fiscal decision making and even objectives

  7. Behavior of Aid Over Medium Term.

  8. Behavior of Aid Over Medium Term- Longer Series.

  9. How Many Reserves Do We Need To Smooth Aid Shocks?

  10. Country Specific Reserves.

  11. Long-run predictability • Irreducible and large uncertainty • Donors? • Recipient reactions • Smoothing infeasible and expensive • Aid-led strategy is fundamentally risky • Malawi fertilizer subsidy

  12. Final provocations/thoughts • Countries should figure out how to live with aid volatility • Vertical funds have merits • Notion of aid/policy interaction may be harmful as well as a bit flimsy • “We” should be prepared to support alternative/non-aid-led strategies too • We don’t pay enough attention to private capital flows: aid shocks seem to result in comparable private outflows on impact. • Donors? • Recipient reactions • Smoothing infeasible and expensive • Aid-led strategy is fundamentally risky • Malawi fertilizer subsidy

More Related