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This paper investigates how consumer price inflation is determined in Mali for 1979-2006 along three macroeconomic explanations: (1) monetarist theories, emphasizing the impact of excess money supply, (2) the structuralist hypothesis, stressing the impact of supply-side constraints, and (3) external theories, describing the effects of foreign transmission mechanisms on a small open economy. The analysis makes use of cointegration techniques and general-to-specific modeling. Average national rainfall, and to a lesser extent deviations from monetary and external sector equilibrium are found to be the main long-run determinants of inflation. The paper offers policy recommendations for controlling inflation in Mali.
Consumer price indexes --- Inflation (Finance) --- Consumer price index --- Cost of living indexes --- CPIs (Consumer price indexes) --- Retail price indexes --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Cost and standard of living --- Price indexes --- Foreign Exchange --- Inflation --- Macroeconomics --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions --- Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General --- Demand for Money --- Monetary economics --- Currency --- Foreign exchange --- Personal income --- Monetary base --- Demand for money --- Real exchange rates --- Prices --- Income --- Money supply --- Money --- Mali
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This paper analyzes the process of Internet diffusion across the world using a panel of 199 countries during 1990-2004. The authors group countries in two categories-low and high-income countries-and show that the Internet diffusion process is well characterized by an S-shape curve for both groups. Low-income countries display a steeper diffusion curve that is equivalent to a right shift of the diffusion curve for high-income countries. The estimated diffusion curves provide evidence of a "catching-up" process, although a very slow one. The paper explores the determinants of Internet diffusion at the country level and across the same income groups. The most novel finding is that network effects seem to be crucial-the number of Internet users in a country in a given year is positively associated with the number of users in the previous year. The findings also show that the degree of competition in the provision of Internet service contributes positively to its diffusion, and there are significant positive language externalities.
Basic --- Computers --- Connectivity --- Digital --- E-Business --- Education --- Education for the Knowledge Economy --- High-Speed --- Income --- Industry --- Information Security and Privacy --- Information Technologies --- Innovations --- Internet Services --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- New Technology --- Private Sector Development --- Simulation --- Social Protections and Labor --- Technology Industry
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This paper analyzes the process of Internet diffusion across the world using a panel of 199 countries during 1990-2004. The authors group countries in two categories-low and high-income countries-and show that the Internet diffusion process is well characterized by an S-shape curve for both groups. Low-income countries display a steeper diffusion curve that is equivalent to a right shift of the diffusion curve for high-income countries. The estimated diffusion curves provide evidence of a "catching-up" process, although a very slow one. The paper explores the determinants of Internet diffusion at the country level and across the same income groups. The most novel finding is that network effects seem to be crucial-the number of Internet users in a country in a given year is positively associated with the number of users in the previous year. The findings also show that the degree of competition in the provision of Internet service contributes positively to its diffusion, and there are significant positive language externalities.
Basic --- Computers --- Connectivity --- Digital --- E-Business --- Education --- Education for the Knowledge Economy --- High-Speed --- Income --- Industry --- Information Security and Privacy --- Information Technologies --- Innovations --- Internet Services --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- New Technology --- Private Sector Development --- Simulation --- Social Protections and Labor --- Technology Industry
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