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Featured researches published by Volodymyr Tulin.


Archive | 2014

India: Defining and Explaining Inclusive Growth and Poverty Reduction

Rahul Anand; Volodymyr Tulin; Naresh Kumar

We document the evolution of poverty and inequality across Indian states during the recent period of rapid growth (2004-09), and examine the role of growth and distribution in reducing poverty. Robust economic growth has been a major driver of poverty reduction and inclusiveness in India. We explore the role of economic policies and macrofinancial conditions in explaining inclusive growth and its components, using a new measure of inclusive growth. Social expenditures, spending on education, and educational attainment rates are important for fostering inclusive growth. Macro-financial stability, with particular attention to inflation risks, is also criticial for promoting inclusive growth.


Disentangling India's Investment Slowdown | 2014

Disentangling India’s Investment Slowdown

Rahul Anand; Volodymyr Tulin

This paper documents the recent slowdown in investment in India and explores its underlying causes. The sharp investment deceleration has sparked an intense debate about the role of interest rates, as well as business confidence and economic policy uncertainty. Our results suggest that while explaining aggregate investment activity better than nominal interest rates, real interest rates account for only one quarter of the explained investment downturn. In addition, standard macro-financial variables do not fully explain the recent investment slump. Using a new measure of economic policy uncertainty, the results suggest that heightened uncertainty and deteriorating business confidence have played a key role in the recent investment slowdown.


Archive | 2016

Understanding India's Food Inflation: The Role of Demand and Supply Factors

Rahul Anand; Naresh Kumar; Volodymyr Tulin

Over the past decade, India has seen a prolonged period of high inflation, to a large extent driven by persistently-high food inflation. This paper investigates the demand and supply factors behind the contribution of relative food inflation to headline CPI inflation. It concludes that in the absence of a stronger food supply growth response, food inflation may exceed non-food inflation by 2 1/2-3 percentage points per year. The sustainability of along-term inflation target of 4 percent under Indias recently-adopted flexible inflation targeting framework will depend on enhancing food supply, agricultural market-based pricing, and reducing price distortions. A well-designed cereal buffer stock liquidation policy could also help mitigate food inflation volatility.


Archive | 2007

Globalization, Gluts, Innovation or Irrationality: What Explains the Easy Financing of the U.S. Current Account Deficit?

Ravi Balakrishnan; Volodymyr Tulin; Tamim Bayoumi

This paper examines the roles of U.S. financial innovation, financial globalization, and the savings glut hypothesis in explaining the rise in U.S. external debt, first in a portfolio balance model, and then empirically. Perhaps surprisingly, financial deepening and falling home bias in industrialized countries explain a large share of external financing. The savings glut hypothesis (including difficult-to-track petrodollar recycling) and U.S. financial innovation are also important, in part as a cause of declining home bias in industrialized countries. The latter underscores the importance of not looking at these factors in isolation, but rather as a constellation of forces that can be self-reinforcing.


U.S. Dollar Risk Premiums and Capital Flows | 2006

U.S. Dollar Risk Premiums and Capital Flows

Ravi Balakrishnan; Volodymyr Tulin

This paper sheds light on the attractiveness of U.S. assets by studying dollar risk premiums, calculated using Consensus exchange rate forecasts, and linking them to bilateral capital flows. The paper finds that the presence of negative dollar risk premiums (i.e. expectations of a dollar depreciation net of interest rate effects) amid record capital inflows could suggest that investors may favor U.S. assets for structural reasons. One possible explanation could be that the Asian crisis created a large pool of savings searching for relatively riskless investment opportunities, which were provided by deep, liquid, and innovative U.S. financial markets with robust investor protection. Moreover, the continued attractiveness of U.S. financial markets to European investors suggests that they offer a large array of assets, with different risk/return characteristics, that facilitate the structuring of diversified investment portfolios. Looking forward, this suggests that the allocative efficiency of U.S. financial markets could mitigate risks of a disorderly unwinding of global current account imbalances.


Crowding-Out or Crowding-In? Public and Private Investment in India | 2015

Crowding-Out or Crowding-In? Public and Private Investment in India

Girish Bahal; Mehdi Raissi; Volodymyr Tulin

This paper contributes to the debate on the relationship between public-capital accumulation and private investment in India along the following dimensions. First, acknowledging major structural changes that the Indian economy has undergone in the past three decades, we study whether public investment in recent years has become more or less complementary to private investment in comparison to the period before 1980. Second, we construct a novel data-set of quarterly aggregate public and private investment in India over the period 1996Q2-2015Q1 using investment-project data from the CapEx-CMIE database. Third, embedding a theory-driven long-run relationship on the model, we estimate a range of Structural Vector Error Correction Models (SVECMs) to re-examine the public and private investment relationship in India. Identification is achieved by decomposing shocks into those with transitory and permanent effects. Our results suggest that while public-capital accumulation crowds out private investment in India over 1950-2012, the opposite is true when we restrict the sample post 1980 or conduct a quarterly analysis since 1996Q2. This change can most likely be attributed to the policy reforms which started during early 1980s and gained momentum after the 1991 crises.


World Development | 2018

Crowding-out or crowding-in? Public and private investment in India

Girish Bahal; Mehdi Raissi; Volodymyr Tulin

This paper contributes to the debate on the relationship between public and private investment in India along the following dimensions. First, acknowledging major structural changes that the Indian economy has undergone in the past three decades, we study whether public investment in recent years has become more or less complementary to private investment in comparison to the period before 1980. Second, we construct a novel data-set of quarterly aggregate public and private investment in India over the period 1996–2015 using investment-project data from the CapEx-CMIE database. Third, embedding a theory-driven long-run relationship on the model, we estimate a range of Structural Vector Error Correction Models (SVECMs) to re-examine the public and private investment relationship in India. Identification is achieved by decomposing shocks into those with transitory and permanent effects. Our results suggest that while public investment crowds out private investment in India over the period 1950–2012, the opposite is true when we restrict the sample to post 1980 or conduct a quarterly analysis since 1996. This change can likely be attributed to the policy reforms which started during the early 1980s and gained momentum after the 1991 crisis.


Comparative Economic Studies | 2018

Central, Eastern, and Southeastern European Countries’ Convergence: A Look at the Past and Considerations for the Future

Laura Papi; Emil Stavrev; Volodymyr Tulin

CESEE countries have achieved substantial progress and their income and living standards have improved significantly since the beginning of transition. Nevertheless, convergence to high-income status is not assured. Strong demographic headwinds ahead and a subdued outlook for capital accumulation reinforce the need for productivity growth to converge to the income levels of advanced European countries. Better governance and institutions hold high promise to deliver the needed productivity growth, by spurring innovation, fostering competition, and retaining and attracting skilled workers.


Archive | 2014

Disentangling India’s Investment Slowdown

Rahul Anand; Volodymyr Tulin

This paper documents the recent slowdown in investment in India and explores its underlying causes. The sharp investment deceleration has sparked an intense debate about the role of interest rates, as well as business confidence and economic policy uncertainty. Our results suggest that while explaining aggregate investment activity better than nominal interest rates, real interest rates account for only one quarter of the explained investment downturn. In addition, standard macro-financial variables do not fully explain the recent investment slump. Using a new measure of economic policy uncertainty, the results suggest that heightened uncertainty and deteriorating business confidence have played a key role in the recent investment slowdown.


Archive | 2014

Estimating Sri Lanka’s Potential Output

Ding Ding; John Nelmes; Roshan Perera; Volodymyr Tulin

In this paper we present various techniques to estimate Sri Lanka’s potential output and output gap, including statistical and model-based approaches. Compared to conventional statistical filters that rely exclusively on information in a single series, the model-based approaches allow potential output estimates to incorporate information contained in observable data series including inflation, actual output, unemployment and capacity utilization. The estimation results suggest that Sri Lanka’s potential output has risen slightly in the last few years.

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Rahul Anand

International Monetary Fund

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Mehdi Raissi

International Monetary Fund

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Ravi Balakrishnan

International Monetary Fund

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Ding Ding

International Monetary Fund

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Naresh Kumar

International Monetary Fund

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Tamim Bayoumi

International Monetary Fund

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John Nelmes

International Monetary Fund

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Roshan Perera

International Monetary Fund

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Girish Bahal

University of Cambridge

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Emil Stavrev

International Monetary Fund

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