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Featured researches published by Annette Kyobe.


IMF Staff Discussion Note: Emerging Markets in Transition: Growth Prospects and Challenges | 2014

Emerging Markets in Transition; Growth Prospects and Challenges

Luis Cubeddu; Alexander Culiuc; Ghada Fayad; Yuan Gao; Kalpana Kochhar; Annette Kyobe; Ceyda Oner; Roberto Perrelli; Sarah Sanya; Evridiki Tsounta; Zhongxia Zhang

After a short-lived slowdown in the immediate aftermath of the global financial crisis and a swift rebound, emerging markets (EM) are now entering a period of slower growth. In fact, growth is now lower than the post-crisis peak of 2010-11, as well as the rates seen in the decade before the crisis. This raises the question of whether EMs can bounce back to the growth rates seen in the last decade or whether their prospects are dimmer than thought a few years ago. This SDN we will explore the drivers of the slowdown, how changes in external conditions that supported high growth in EMs will affect them over the medium term, and the policy priorities needed to sustain the growth rates seen in the past decades. In doing so, the paper differentiates EMs along various dimensions (e.g. degree of commodity dependence, trade and financial openness) to highlight the need to tailor policy priorities.


The Political Economy of Revenue-Forecasting Experience From Low-Income Countries | 2005

The Political Economy of Revenue-Forecasting Experience from Low-Income Countries

Stephan Danninger; Annette Kyobe; M. Cangiano

This paper analyzes interference and timeliness in the revenue-forecasting process, using new data on revenue-forecasting practices in low-income countries. Interference is defined as the occurrence of a significant deviation from purely technical forecasts. A theoretical model explains forecasting interference through government corruption. The data broadly supports the model, and the results are robust to alternative explanations. The paper also constructs three indices-transparency, formality, and organizational simplicity-that characterize revenue-forecasting practices, and assesses their effectiveness in producing an upfront-that is, timely-budget envelope. More transparent and simple forecasting processes lead to early budget constraints, while formality has no measurable effect.


Revenue Forecasting-How is it done? Results from a Survey of Low-Income Countries | 2005

Revenue Forecasting - How is it done? Results from a Survey of Low-Income Countries

Annette Kyobe; Stephan Danninger

This paper takes stock of revenue forecasting practices in low-income countries, and provides a comprehensive and condensed account of the revenue forecasting process. Based on a new dataset on 34 low-income countries, it catalogues forecasting practices and procedures from inception until budget submission, focusing primarily on institutional aspects and processes. The paper also synthesizes three key characteristics of forecasting practices, formality, organizational simplicity, and transparency, and empirically explores their determinants. High levels of country corruption are associated with less formal and less transparent forecasts. Past IMF involvement in a country increases the formality of the process, but does not improve public access to information.


Global Financial Spillovers to Emerging Market Sovereign Bond Markets | 2015

Global Financial Spillovers to Emerging Market Sovereign Bond Markets

Christian Hubert Ebeke; Annette Kyobe

Foreign holdings of emerging markets (EMs) government bonds have increased substantially over the last decade. While foreign participation in local-currency sovereign bond markets provides an additional source of financing and reduces sovereign yields, it raises concerns about increased sensitivity of yields to shifts in market sentiment. The analysis in this paper suggests that foreign participation and an undiversified investor base transmit global financial shocks to local-currency sovereign bond markets by increasing yield volatility and, beyond a certain threshold, amplify these spillovers. These estimates are robust to a range of econometric techniques including panel smooth threshold regression.


Structural Reforms and Productivity Growth in Emerging Market and Developing Economies | 2016

Structural Reforms and Productivity Growth in Emerging Market and Developing Economies

Era Dabla-Norris; Giang Ho; Annette Kyobe

This paper empirically assesses the role of structural and institutional reforms in driving productivity growth across countries at different stages of development, using a distance-to-frontier framework. It gauges whether particular policies and reforms matter more for increasing productivity growth at the aggregate and sectoral levels for some emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs) than others. Recognizing the possibility of time lags between reform implementation and reform payoffs, the paper also examines how productivity gains from various reforms evolve over the the short- and medium-term.


Structural Reforms and External Rebalancing | 2017

Structural Reforms and External Rebalancing

Alexander Culiuc; Annette Kyobe

Empirical research on structural reforms has focused primarily on their impact on growth and productivity. Yet an often-invoked rationale for structural reforms is their impact on external adjustment. This paper finds little evidence that structural reforms improve the current account in the short run, but they can increase the responsiveness and resilience of the economy to external shocks. In particular, elasticities of exports with respect to the real effective exchange rate increase with some structural indicators, suggesting that structural reforms facilitate the reallocation of resources to the tradable sector in response to a negative external shock. The paper concludes that structural reforms, while not having an immediate positive impact on the current account balance, can be an important complement to traditional macroeconomic adjustment.


Journal of Economic Growth | 2011

Investing in public investment: an index of public investment efficiency

Era Dabla-Norris; Jim Brumby; Annette Kyobe; Zac Mills; Chris Papageorgiou


World Development | 2008

Determinants of Government Efficiency

David Hauner; Annette Kyobe


IMF Staff Discussion Note: Anchoring Growth - The Importance of Productivity-Enhancing Reforms in Emerging Market and Developing Economies | 2013

Anchoring Growth: The Importance of Productivity-Enhancing Reforms in Emerging Market and Developing Economies

Era Dabla-Norris; Giang Ho; Kalpana Kochhar; Annette Kyobe; Robert Tchaidze


Emerging Markets in Transition : Growth Prospects and Challenges | 2014

Emerging Markets in Transition

Luis Cubeddu; Alexander Culiuc; Ghada Fayad; Yuan Gao; Kalpana Kochhar; Annette Kyobe; Ceyda Oner; Roberto Perrelli; Sarah Sanya; Evridiki Tsounta; Zhongxia Zhang

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Era Dabla-Norris

International Monetary Fund

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Kalpana Kochhar

International Monetary Fund

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Chris Papageorgiou

International Monetary Fund

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Evridiki Tsounta

International Monetary Fund

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Ghada Fayad

International Monetary Fund

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Giang Ho

International Monetary Fund

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Luis Cubeddu

International Monetary Fund

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Roberto Perrelli

International Monetary Fund

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Stephan Danninger

International Monetary Fund

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