تأثير التضخم الركودي على النمو الاقتصادي في الدول النامية للمدة 1984-2002

المؤلفون

  • د. فواز جارالله
  • هيثم أكرم سعيد

الملخص

The theoretical frame of the present study has Presented a detailed
presentation for the nature of the dispute existed among the intellectual
trends that reject Keynes thoughts and opinions and Philips and his
supporters' theory represented by the schools of stagflation in the capitalist
economics and the reflections of the opinions of each school on the
economics and the developing countries. In addition, the study attempts to
explain the inflation line in the developing countries and the relation
between this variable and the economic growth, and to present a brief view
about the unemployment situation in those countries as well, The
importance of the present research comes out from the verification of its hypothesis which says that the stagflation has an
influence not only on capitalist economics but
also on the developing economics. The research hypothesizes that both the internal and external factors have their influential
role in showing the stagflation phenomenon for the countries under
investigation and its reflection on the economic growth in those countries.
The study has shown that the stagflation in its outset has positively
influenced some of the sample countries. Nevertheless, that influence has
been in decreased rates. That has been obvious in Argentina, Brazil, Costa
Rica, Uruguay, as well as Chile after dropping the variable of time. The
study has also concluded that the stagflation in its outset has a not shown its
effect on Venezuela and Ecuador because these countries are distinguished
among the sample countries in that they have benefited from the oil
incomes to cut down the effect the stagflation on the economic growth.

التنزيلات

منشور

2023-01-24

كيفية الاقتباس

د. فواز جارالله, & هيثم أكرم سعيد. (2023). تأثير التضخم الركودي على النمو الاقتصادي في الدول النامية للمدة 1984-2002. مجلة بحوث مستقبلية, (25,26), 75–104. استرجع في من https://pr.hu.edu.iq/index.php/pr/article/view/160