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Public Financial Management (OL18.119, PFMx) in English
Work at your own pace from May – July 4, 2018.
Total expected workload: 40-50 hours
Application deadline: May 2, 2018
Course Description:
This online course, presented by the IMF’s Fiscal Affairs Department, provides an overview of PFM systems, institutions, and capacity building in developing and emerging market economies. It focuses on PFM issues based on the IMF’s operational and analytical perspectives, in support of macroeconomic stability, economic growth, and achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The training covers a wide range of topics, and treats PFM as an integrated system. As such, it focuses on PFM priorities, reform objectives and implementation risks. The course takes conceptual and practical approaches, and includes testimonies from ministers of finance, practitioners, and civil society.
Macroeconomic Management in Resource-Rich Countries (OL18.05, MRCx) in English
April 4 – May 23, 2018 (7 weeks)
Expected workload: 6 – 8 hours a week
Application deadline: March 28, 2018
Course Description:
This course, presented by the IMF Institute for Capacity Development, the Fiscal Affairs Department, and the Statistics Department discusses macroeconomic policy issues and challenges that confront resource-rich countries.
Watch a special video introducing the course!
Energy Subsidy Reform (OL18.103, ESRx) in English
Complete at your own pace from March 28 – April 25, 2018
Expected workload: Approx. 32 hours over 4 weeks
Application deadline: March 26, 2018
Course Description:
This course builds on an extensive cross-country analysis, which is reported analysis, reported notably in the IMF book on “Energy Subsidy Reform: Lessons and Implications,” to make recommendations on how to best implement reforms aimed at reducing state subsidies on energy.
It will introduce the concept of energy subsidies – their definition and measurement – and will review the economic social and environmental implications of subsidies. It will also present tools for assessing the distributional effects of alternative subsidy reform scenarios on the population. Finally, the course will review what works best in energy subsidy reform and will illustrate successes and failures in particular country contexts by summarizing some case studies.
Financial Programming and Policies, Part 1: Macroeconomic Accounts (OL18.105, FPP.1x) in English
Work at your own pace between May 1 and October 31
Total expected workload: Approx. 48-60 hours.
This course explains the basic skills required to conduct financial programming; the principal features of the accounts of the four main sectors that comprise the macroeconomy (real, fiscal, external, and monetary); and how they relate to each other. For each sector, the course presents the accounting framework, interpretations of variables and indicators from these accounts, and basic analysis of the accounts.
Debt Sustainability Analysis (OL18.117, DSAx) in English
Work at your own pace between May 1 and October 31
Total expected workload: between 40-50 hours
This course provides, in five modules, a comprehensive overview of the frameworks for debt sustainability analysis and debt management. The modules are as follows:
– the key concepts of debt sustainability and the role of macroeconomic policies;
– debt sustainability framework for countries with market access;
– debt sustainability framework for low-income countries;
– a medium-term debt management strategy (MTDS) framework;
– and debt sustainability analysis under uncertainty.
Macroeconomic Diagnostics (OL18.08, MDSx) in English
May 2 – June 13, 2018 (6 weeks)
Total expected workload: 6 – 9 hours a week
Application deadline: April 25, 2018
Course Description:
This online course aims at strengthening participants’ ability to assess a country’s macroeconomic situation, emphasizing practical tools for use in day-to-day macroeconomic analysis. The course covers assessments of: the current state of the macroeconomy; the stance of fiscal and monetary policy; financial stability; and the medium-term prospects of the economy including the sustainability of public and external debt, the possible misalignment of the exchange rate, and vulnerabilities from the different sectors.
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