Welcome to the Growth Blog

The Growth Blog is a forum for you - the policy maker, the academic, the student, and the interested citizen of the world - to agree, disagree, or simply to engage current practitioners on policies and issues critical to development. This platform was inspired by the series of meetings that the Commission on Growth and Development held around the world over the course of the last two years. Of the many lessons that emerged in the deliberations, the one that stands out is that inclusive growth requires inclusive thinking, and inclusive discussion.

Washington consensus

Williamson versus the Washington consensus?

Williamson versus the Washington Consensus?
 
It seems that the deliberations of the Spence Commission once again involved discussion of the merits of my child (her illegitimate brother, according to my daughter) the Washington consensus. It seems also that my intellectual position on three crucial policy issues put me at odds with a common conception of the Washington Consensus. The three issues are exchange rate policy, capital controls, and privatization.
 
On exchange rates, I have long favored intermediate regimes to fixed or floating rates, on the grounds that there are other objectives besides avoiding speculative crises, notably avoiding Dutch disease, and that one can tame capital movements by other techniques than allowing exchange rates to float. The Washington consensus has sometimes been interpreted as implying support for the bipolar position that one has to fix or float and cannot logically do anything in between: see, for example, Dani Rodrik’s augmented Washington consensus. So Williamson is against the Washington consensus, certainly in its augmented version.
Syndicate content