Chronic Inflation in an Industrializing Economy
Many middle income industrializing economies in Latin America are today beset by price inflation at rates close to or exceeding previous records. In this book Vincent Parkin sets out to explain the nature and causes of chronic inflation in such economies by focusing on the Brazilian experience since 1964. A theoretical model is developed to show how structural bottlenecks and cost-push pressures can lead to continuous inflation. The model, incorporating as it does stocks and flows of financial assets, forms a bridge between structuralist explanations for inflation, that have tended to abstract from money and finance, and purely monetary explanations.
Reviews & endorsements
"David Parkin's monograph belongs to that distinctive shelf of metaphysical ethnographies of Africa...the book is lucidly written, comprising a coherent essay from start to finish." George Park, The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology
Product details
May 1991Hardback
9780521375405
334 pages
229 × 152 × 19 mm
0.62kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I. Theory and Empirical Background:
- 1. A theoretical framework for the study of inflation rooted in the Latin American structuralist approach
- 2. Brazil's experience with inflation since 1960: the evidence and existing interpretations
- Part II. The Determinants of Wages and Prices:
- 3. The manufacturing price index
- 4. Average earnings in manufacturing industry
- 5. The price of food and food supply
- 6. Other price relationships
- Part III. The Inflationary Process:
- 7. A marcoeconomic model for Brazil
- 8. Model validation and evaluation
- 9. Policy experiments
- 10. Conclusion
- Appendices
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.