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dc.date.accessioned2015-04-28T16:00:58Zen
dc.date.available2015-04-28T16:00:58Zen
dc.date.created2006en
dc.date.issueden
dc.identifier.urien
dc.description.abstractLimited fiscal space limits Djibouti's ability to meet the Millennium Development Goals and improve the living conditions of its population. Djibouti's fiscal structure is unique in that almost 70 percent of government revenue is denominated in foreign currency (import taxes, foreign aid grants, and military revenue) while over 50 percent of government expenditure is denominated in local currency (wages, salaries, and social transfers). Djibouti's economic structure is also unusual in that merchandise exports of local origin are insignificant, and the country relies heavily on imported goods (food, medicines, consumer and capital goods). A currency devaluation, by reducing real wages, could potentially generate additional fiscal space that would help meet Djibouti's fundamental development goals. Using macroeconomic and household level data, the authors quantify the impact of a devaluation of the nominal exchange rate on fiscal savings, real public sector wages, real income, and poverty under various hypothetical scenarios of exchange-rate pass-through and magnitude of devaluation. They find that a currency devaluation could generate fiscal savings in the short-term, but it would have an adverse effect on poverty and income distribution. A 30 percent nominal exchange rate devaluation could generate fiscal savings amounting between 3 and 7 percent of GDP. At the same time, a 30 percent nominal devaluation could cause nearly a fifth of the poorest households to fall below the extreme poverty line and pull the same fraction of upper middle-income households below the national poverty line. The authors also find that currency devaluation could generate net fiscal savings even after accounting for the additional social transfers needed to compensate the poor for their real income loss. However, the absence of formal social safety nets limits the government's readiness to provide well-targeted and timely social transfers to the poor.en
dc.description.uriDOI: https://doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-4028en
dc.publisherWorld Banken
dc.relation.isPartOfPolicy Research Working Papers, October 2006en
dc.rightsThis item is currently unavailable in DigitalGeorgetown due to copyright restrictions by the publisher.en
dc.subjectAccountingen
dc.subjectBank Policyen
dc.subjectCurrency Devaluationen
dc.subjectDeveloping Countriesen
dc.subjectExchange Rateen
dc.subjectGovernment Expenditureen
dc.titleFiscal and Social Impact of a Nominal Exchange Rate Devaluation in Djiboutien
dc.typeArticleen


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