How best to link poverty reduction and debt sustainability in IMF-World Bank models?
journal contribution
posted on 2006-05-30, 11:51authored byBrigitte Granville, Sushanta K. Mallick
This paper attempts to provide an economic model in the context of developing countries to address the policy strategies related to poverty reduction. With a view to deal with the shortcomings of the existing approaches as regards poverty reduction, this paper develops a model on the basis of the policy framework of the IMF and the World Bank to show how demand growth can be a crucial mechanism in determining the potential rate of growth, and then to suggest ways in which poverty—conceptualised officially in absolute terms with a subjective cut-off point (e.g. US $1/$2 a day), and a new objective measure in terms of consumption deprivation—can be linked with the key policy variables contained in the adjustment programmes. A strategy of investment in infrastructure and in human development, and improving access to credit markets, particularly in rural areas to encourage or ‘crowd in’ private investment is a precondition for growth and poverty alleviation. Debt relief can only provide a temporary, not a sustainable, solution to the problem of reducing poverty.
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Economics
Pages
98207 bytes
Citation
GRANVILLE, B. and MALLICK, S., 2005. How best to link poverty reduction and debt sustainability in IMF-World Bank models? International Review of Applied Economics, 19(1), pp. 67-85.