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Foreign inflows, commercial law, and dutch disease: Evidence from developing economies
2022
Frontiers in Environmental Science
It is commonly believed that developing markets require inflows of foreign capital to achieve their growth targets; however, recent research has shown that these inflows are either ineffective or even harmful to the economy. A surge in foreign inflows, such as foreign aid, remittances, and foreign direct investment, into developing markets, particularly, have been connected to the Dutch disease hypothesis. A sharp rise in such inflows will stimulate real exchange rate in receiving nations due
doi:10.3389/fenvs.2022.981038
fatcat:p6c6nskwyfgw7bmc3qrczuru7y