Economic and Social Progress in Latin America, 1996 Report: Special Section, Making Social Services WorkA comprehensive resource guide on the Latin American and Caribbean economies. The annual report features statistical profiles of regional and national economic performance, as well as year-by-year consolidated data for the past decade on population, national accounts, central government finances, balance of payments, and external debt. |
Contents
Section 1 | 3 |
Section 2 | 99 |
Section 3 | 103 |
Section 4 | 123 |
Section 5 | 149 |
Section 6 | 151 |
Section 7 | 183 |
Section 8 | 185 |
Section 9 | 189 |
Section 10 | 196 |
Section 11 | 200 |
Section 12 | 204 |
Section 13 | 208 |
Section 14 | 210 |
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Common terms and phrases
adjustment allocated Appendix Argentina Automatic average Bahamas Bank Bolivia boom borrowing autonomy Brazil budget institutions capital central government changes Chile Colombia constraints Costa Rica coun countries decade decentralization Development Discretional District magnitude Dominican Republic economic growth Ecuador effects El Salvador elections electoral systems employment ernment expenditures exports factors FIGURE fiscal balance fiscal deficit fiscal performance fiscal policy growth rate Guatemala Honduras impact important improve income distribution increase industrial economies inflation investment labor Latin America levels of government Londoño macroeconomic markets ment Mexico municipalities Nicaragua nomic OECD Paraguay percent of GDP Peru political population problem procyclical productivity programs public sector real exchange rate reduce region regressions result revenues Salvador social security Source stabilization structural policy structural reforms subnational governments subnational level Székely T-Stat tend terms of trade tion transfers Uruguay variables Venezuela vertical imbalance volatility yes yes yes ZZZZ ZZZZ ZZZZ