-
About ADB
-
Organization
- Overview
- Key Facts
- Members
- Board of Governors
- Board of Directors
- Management
- Departments and Offices
- Policies and Strategies
- Partners
- Annual Meetings
- FAQs
- Independent Evaluation
-
Financial Operations
- Public Sector (Sovereign) Financing
- Private Sector (Nonsovereign) Financing
- Funds and Resources
- Asian Development Fund
- Investor Information
-
Opportunities
- Careers
- Business Opportunities
-
- News & Events
-
Data & Research
-
Research at ADB
- Publications
- Statistics and Databases
- Seminars and Lectures
- Links
- Contacts
-
- Publications
- Sectors & Themes
- Projects
-
Countries
-
Subregional Programs
- Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA)
- Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (CAREC)
- Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS)
- Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT)
-
Other Offices
- European Representative Office
- Japanese Representative Office
- North American Representative Office
- Pacific Liaison and Coordination Office
- South Pacific Subregional Office
-
Countries with Operations
- Afghanistan
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Bangladesh
- Bhutan
- Cambodia
- China, People's Republic of
- Cook Islands
- Fiji
- Georgia
- India
- Indonesia
- Kazakhstan
- Kiribati
-
Asian Development Outlook 2010: Macroeconomic Management Beyond the Crisis
Date: | April 2010 |
Type: | Books |
Country: | |
Subject: | |
Series: | Asian Development Outlook |
ISSN: | 0117-0481 (print) |
Price: |
Hardcopy price: $75.00 |
Description
The annual Asian Development Outlook provides a comprehensive analysis of economic performance for the past year and offers forecasts for the next 2 years for the 45 Asian economies that make up developing Asia.
This edition sees developing Asia emerging from the recent crisis and posting a strong recovery in the next 2 years, as a moderate global recovery supports a modest revival in global trade. Investment is expected to remain strong and private consumption is anticipated to improve. Inflation will pick up, but at manageable levels.
Beyond the crisis, developing Asia faces the challenge of adjusting its monetary, exchange rate, and fiscal policies to foster macroeconomic stability and sustained growth within the broader direction of a return to prudence and discipline.
Contents
- Foreword, Acknowledgments, Contents, Definitions, Acronyms and Abbreviations Highlights - ADO 2010
-
Momentum for a sustained recovery?
- Gauging the strength of industrial countries' recovery
- Developing Asia's prospects in the recovery
- Sources of Asia's growth during and beyond the crisis
- A case for monetary and fiscal activism?
-
Macroeconomic management beyond the crisis
- Introduction
- Monetary policy
- Exchange rate and capital account liberalization
- Fiscal policy
- Key policy messages
- Economic trends and prospects in developing Asia
-
Statistical appendix [ XLS ]
- Statistical notes and tables