The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica

Introduction The history of economic policy in Jamaica since World War II, viewed at some distance, reflects the broad sweep of fashion in the history of economic development. The cycles of industrialization by foreign investment, import substitution, populist socialism, and structural adjustment ar...

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Autor principal: King, Damien
Formato: Texto
Idioma:English
Publicado: ECLAC 2000-05
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/7600
id RI-11362-7600
record_format dspace
spelling King, Damien
NU. CEPAL
NU. CEPAL. División de Desarrollo Económico
Países Bajos. Gobierno
2014-01-02T16:50:41Z
2014-01-02T16:50:41Z
2000-05
http://hdl.handle.net/11362/7600
LC/L.1361
Includes bibliography
Introduction The history of economic policy in Jamaica since World War II, viewed at some distance, reflects the broad sweep of fashion in the history of economic development. The cycles of industrialization by foreign investment, import substitution, populist socialism, and structural adjustment are all present. The most recent phase of that history, that of structural economic reform, has however presented some confusion in the literature on Jamaica. At one extreme, economic reform may be dated from 1977, when Jamaica signed its first Stand By Agreement with the IMF, accompanied by the usual list of conditionalities and their implications for economic reform. Witter and Anderson (1991);, largely using that fact, and Lora (1997);, using a narrow list of indicators, imply that Jamaica is an early reformer. At the other extreme, some key elements of economic reform were not implemented until 1991. Following this vein, Handa and King (1997); suggest that economic reform is a phenomenon of the 1990s. The survey of economic reform below reveals a country drawn reluctantly into the reform era, implementing some aspects of economic reform from the early 1980s, delaying others until the 1990s and ignoring a few elements entirely. Economic liberalism has not caught the popular imagination in Jamaica. The fundamental liberal ideas underlying structural adjustment reform are not popular in Jamaica, and have for the most part been foisted on the people by first, an unwilling administration, and later, by an unfocused one merely following to a limited extent world economic fashion. This unwillingness and lack of commitment will be important in understanding the inconsistency in the reform process as it unfolded in Jamaica. Jamaica represents an interesting case study of economic reform for a number of reasons. First, the various aspects of economic reform occurred during distinct periods. This case stands in contrast to those, such as Chile in the late 1970s, that changed economic policy radically over a relatively short period of time. The Jamaican case, therefore, may be instructive in understanding issues surrounding the timing and sequencing of reform. The other reason why Jamaica presents an important case study is that, amongst reforming economies, it has one of the worst records of economic performance in Latin America and the Caribbean during the era of economic reform. While average growth in the region was 2.2 percent per annum in the 1980s, Jamaica grew at an annual average of only 1.4 percent 1 . In the 1990s, the discrepancy worsened. The economies of Latin American and the Caribbean averaged 3.0 percent per annum from 1991 to 1996, but Jamaica's average growth rate was a mere 1.3 percent. Even within the Caribbean alone, Jamaica's relatively poor performance is manifest. The average growth rate for the period 1980 to 1996 is 3.0, whereas Jamaica managed only 1.4 percent annually over the same period.
48 páginas.
en
ECLAC
Serie Reformas Económicas
65
The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica
Texto
Documento Completo
Proyecto Crecimiento, Empleo y Equidad: América Latina en los Años Noventa HOL/97/6034
División de Desarrollo Económico
Disponible
Santiago
48 p. : tabls.
S2000580 S
INT UN/EC 20(65/2000)
LC/L.1361
Santiago
AJUSTE ESTRUCTURAL
ESTABILIZACION ECONOMICA
INFLACION
POLITICA ECONOMICA
POLITICA FISCAL
POLITICA SOCIAL
REFORMA ECONOMICA
TIPOS DE CAMBIO
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC STABILIZATION
FISCAL POLICY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES
INFLATION
SOCIAL POLICY
STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT
JAMAICA
JAMAICA
Series
MACROECONOMÍA
POLÍTICAS Y PROGRAMAS SOCIALES
MACROECONOMICS
SOCIAL POLICIES AND PROGRAMMES
4587
DESARROLLO ECONÓMICO
DESARROLLO SOCIAL
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
tablas
elec_str_mv Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe(CEPAL)
collection Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe(CEPAL)
title The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica
spellingShingle The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica
King, Damien
AJUSTE ESTRUCTURAL
ESTABILIZACION ECONOMICA
INFLACION
POLITICA ECONOMICA
POLITICA FISCAL
POLITICA SOCIAL
REFORMA ECONOMICA
TIPOS DE CAMBIO
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC STABILIZATION
FISCAL POLICY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES
INFLATION
SOCIAL POLICY
STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT
title_short The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica
title_full The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica
title_fullStr The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in Jamaica
title_sort evolution of structural adjustment and stabilization policy in jamaica
author King, Damien
author_facet King, Damien
topic AJUSTE ESTRUCTURAL
ESTABILIZACION ECONOMICA
INFLACION
POLITICA ECONOMICA
POLITICA FISCAL
POLITICA SOCIAL
REFORMA ECONOMICA
TIPOS DE CAMBIO
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC STABILIZATION
FISCAL POLICY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES
INFLATION
SOCIAL POLICY
STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT
topic_facet AJUSTE ESTRUCTURAL
ESTABILIZACION ECONOMICA
INFLACION
POLITICA ECONOMICA
POLITICA FISCAL
POLITICA SOCIAL
REFORMA ECONOMICA
TIPOS DE CAMBIO
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC STABILIZATION
FISCAL POLICY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES
INFLATION
SOCIAL POLICY
STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT
publishDate 2000-05
language English
publisher ECLAC
physical 48 páginas.
format Texto
description Introduction The history of economic policy in Jamaica since World War II, viewed at some distance, reflects the broad sweep of fashion in the history of economic development. The cycles of industrialization by foreign investment, import substitution, populist socialism, and structural adjustment are all present. The most recent phase of that history, that of structural economic reform, has however presented some confusion in the literature on Jamaica. At one extreme, economic reform may be dated from 1977, when Jamaica signed its first Stand By Agreement with the IMF, accompanied by the usual list of conditionalities and their implications for economic reform. Witter and Anderson (1991);, largely using that fact, and Lora (1997);, using a narrow list of indicators, imply that Jamaica is an early reformer. At the other extreme, some key elements of economic reform were not implemented until 1991. Following this vein, Handa and King (1997); suggest that economic reform is a phenomenon of the 1990s. The survey of economic reform below reveals a country drawn reluctantly into the reform era, implementing some aspects of economic reform from the early 1980s, delaying others until the 1990s and ignoring a few elements entirely. Economic liberalism has not caught the popular imagination in Jamaica. The fundamental liberal ideas underlying structural adjustment reform are not popular in Jamaica, and have for the most part been foisted on the people by first, an unwilling administration, and later, by an unfocused one merely following to a limited extent world economic fashion. This unwillingness and lack of commitment will be important in understanding the inconsistency in the reform process as it unfolded in Jamaica. Jamaica represents an interesting case study of economic reform for a number of reasons. First, the various aspects of economic reform occurred during distinct periods. This case stands in contrast to those, such as Chile in the late 1970s, that changed economic policy radically over a relatively short period of time. The Jamaican case, therefore, may be instructive in understanding issues surrounding the timing and sequencing of reform. The other reason why Jamaica presents an important case study is that, amongst reforming economies, it has one of the worst records of economic performance in Latin America and the Caribbean during the era of economic reform. While average growth in the region was 2.2 percent per annum in the 1980s, Jamaica grew at an annual average of only 1.4 percent 1 . In the 1990s, the discrepancy worsened. The economies of Latin American and the Caribbean averaged 3.0 percent per annum from 1991 to 1996, but Jamaica's average growth rate was a mere 1.3 percent. Even within the Caribbean alone, Jamaica's relatively poor performance is manifest. The average growth rate for the period 1980 to 1996 is 3.0, whereas Jamaica managed only 1.4 percent annually over the same period.
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/7600
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