José De Gregorio


José De GregorioJosé De Gregorio has been Governor of the Central Bank of Chile since December 2007. He was formerly Vice-Governor from December 2003, and member of the Bank’s Board from June 2001. He has also been Minister of the Economy, Mining and Energy in Chile, and Full-Professor of Economics at Universidad Católica, Universidad de Chile and affiliated with the Peterson Institute for International Economics.




Papers Published in World Economics:


Latin America: From Recovery To Slowdown

Economic performance in Latin America has been disappointing. After a successful recovery from the global financial crisis, growth in 2014 was in most countries, much below expectations and in 2015, growth would still be low. Among the largest seven economies of the region (LAC7), a contraction of output is expected in Argentina, Brazil and Venezuela, while in Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru, growth would be about 3 percent. This paper discusses the main factors that explain why growth has been declining. There are cyclical reasons, and, as should have been expected, after rapid recovery, a deceleration should follow. In addition, the evidence would support that potential output growth is below what was experienced at the beginning of this decade, whereas previous assessments were optimistic. The slowdown started before commodity prices started declining, and terms of trade were not significantly low. Therefore it is difficult to blame external factors on the slowdown. However, prospects of lower commodity prices will add to the drag of economic growth. The commodity price boom had a relevant effect on activity, but more than an income effect, it resulted in an investment boom. This has been particularly relevant in Chile and Peru, where that boom has come to an end, adding to the deceleration. Although monetary and fiscal policy may still have a role in supporting demand within inflation target regimes, the main problem in the region is not a lack of demand, but low productivity growth. Efforts must be made to foster productivity. More recently, the cost of institutional weakness and high degrees of inequality have highlighted areas of progress which should be actioned in order to resume high sustainable growth.

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Adjustment in the Global Economy

This article discusses the global adjustment process and the current challenges for policymaking, with a special focus on the asymmetries and their implications for economic policy. It reviews the uneven recovery faced by developed and emerging economies. Emphasis is made on the situation of China and the US, especially in terms of the implications of their adjustments to the global economic tensions. The article also puts a highlight on the challenges that the emerging economies face, in terms of exchange rate appreciations, capital inflows and inflation pressures and their implications for economic policy management. Policymakers in emerging economies should secure a strong and sustainable growth, and containing inflationary pressures is a key factor in this endeavor.

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José De Gregorio on Howard Davies and David Green: Banking on the Future. The Fall and Rise of Central Banking
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Chile: Foreign Shocks and Policy Responses

In 2009, the world is facing the worst recession in more than six decades. Chile has been no exception. In spite of this outlook, the Chilean economy stands on solid ground, and recent figures show that the recovery has started. This article discusses the fundamentals of the Chilean economy and how economic policies have responded to the strong foreign shocks of the past few years. These range from the severe inflation outburst over part of 2007 and 2008, the consequences of the world’s financial crisis and the current risk of an extended period of low inflation.

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