Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10419/83850 
Year of Publication: 
2004
Series/Report no.: 
Working Paper No. 568
Publisher: 
University of California, Economics Department, Santa Cruz, CA
Abstract: 
This paper discusses some puzzles in the contemporary macroeconomic scene in India, from the perspective of public finance and economic development. These include a fiscal deficit higher than it was during the 1991 crisis, but without a large current account deficit or rise in inflation or interest rates, a rising inflow of external capital, accompanied by the RBI's sterilizing these inflows and accumulating large reserves, even in the face of low inflation. We offer a critique of some previous analyses, and some models that are suggestive of how real and monetary factors might be integrated in providing a firmer grounding for the policy debates current in India.
Subjects: 
foreign capital
sterilization
absorption
crowding out
inflation
growth
Document Type: 
Working Paper

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