Dutch Disease-cum-financialization booms and external balance cycles in developing countries

Vol. 37 No. 3 (2017)

Jul-Sep / 2017
Published February 26, 2020
PDF-English
PDF-English

How to Cite

Botta, Alberto. 2017. “Dutch Disease-Cum-Financialization Booms and External Balance Cycles in Developing Countries”. Brazilian Journal of Political Economy 37 (3):459-77. https://doi.org/10.1590/0101-31572017v37n03a01.

Dutch Disease-cum-financialization booms and external balance cycles in developing countries

Alberto Botta
Department of International Business and Economics, University of Greenwich.
Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 37 No. 3 (2017), Jul-Sep / 2017, Pages 459-477

Abstract

We formally investigate the medium-to-long-run dynamics emerging out of a Dutch disease-cum-financialization phenomenon. We take inspiration from the most recent Colombian development pattern. The “pure” Dutch disease first causes deindustrialization by permanently appreciating the economy’s exchange rate in the long run. Financialization, i.e. booming capital inflows taking place in a climate of natural resource-led financial over-optimism, causes medium-run exchange rate volatility and macroeconomic instability. This jeopardizes manufacturing development even further by raising macroeconomic uncertainty. We advise the adoption of capital controls and a developmentalist monetary policy to tackle these two distinct but often intertwined phenomena.

JEL Classification: F32; O14; O24.


Keywords: Dutch disease financialization exchange rate volatility developmentalist monetary policy