The experience of developing countries over 1990–2010 indicates that commodity prices have a significant impact on fiscal outcomes. Both revenue and expenditure rise in response to commodity (import or export) price increases; the response of the fiscal deficit is ambiguous. A floating exchange rate regime only partially offsets the impact; foreign-exchange reserves do not dampen the effects. Hence, there is a strong case for fiscal hedging against commodity price shocks. Hedging instruments based on a limited set of benchmark world prices for a narrow set of commodities may suffice to realize most of the potential benefits.
CITATION STYLE
Samaké, I., & Spatafora, N. (2012). Commodity Price Shocks and Fiscal Outcomes. IMF Working Papers, 12(112), 1. https://doi.org/10.5089/9781475503333.001
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