Development Macroeconomics by Peter Montiel and Jean-Pier Agenor. The book discusses the role of macroprudential regulation, both independently and through its interactions with monetary policy, in preserving financial and macroeconomic stability. It is a bit dated, now in its fourth edition, but remains still the only text book on the macroeconomics of developing countries.
Suggest you contact the GDAE Center at Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA - they have been developing a broad range of materials focused on the environment (Economics) and economic development in the ‘Third World’
There are two books of macroeconomics for the Albanian case. First one is the book entitled "The Liquidity trap: the Albanian case" http://www.mcser.org/journal/index.php/ajis/article/view/9555/9213
The second book that will be published soon is entitled "
The euroization of the Albanian economy and its consequences in economy"
There is a lot of pseudo-science being spread about as if it were true macroeconomics. The only true science here is when you examine the subject as if you were an engineer and used sensible logical modeling techniques and formal analysis.
Please review my 8 page paper "Einstein's Criterion Applied to Logical Macroeconomics Modeling" (added here as ModelDerivation4-1) and then, if you agree with this way of thinking write to me at [email protected] for a free e-copy of my 310 page book "Consequential Macroeconomics" which is the first truly scientific work on this vital subject!
I found your paper very interesting. It describes one of the most important economics agents and does a correlation with other subjects within concrete interactions. It is a real study and not a theoretical one. If you think that the paper may be improved I suggest that if the schema can be divided according to the specific items can be more applicable and more simply understood. It exists also some other simple models and schemas with whom I work (in Albanian but I can send you the schemas with some language improvement). Another one is the so called the Leontief model. If you need additional papers which I have published with my colleagues, please be free to contact me. Greetings for your work. Best regards, Alqi Naqellari
depending on the planned use of the book, the one that I have in mind could be of use for practitioners: this book very practical and oriented towards finance ministries of developing countries. It is written by Benedikt Braumann (2016) "Macroeconomic Planning - Principles of Financial Programming". The Publisher is SECO, Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs. I am not sure whether the book is freely available, though.