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21 horror movies in 48 hours. Had anything comparable ever been attempted? Would it be possible to absorb such a volume of madness and stupidity? Could me maintain our sanity after such a barrage of bad taste. Out of these questions an experiment was born—an experiment that will forever by known as ShockDecember.Three young men push the limits of taste and sanity by plunging headlong into the movie marathon to end all movie marathons. Misleading box covers! Foolish teenage victims! Continuity errors galore! The pole vault to freedom! Multiple Donald Pleasance sightings! Rampaging panavans! Tom Hanks and his diatribe on fear! And the worm eating, the glorious worm eating! The mind-bending experience of ShockDecember is documented within these pages.
Commodity-exporting countries have significantly benefited from the commodity price boom of recent years. At the current juncture, however, uncertain global economic prospects have raised questions about their vulnerability to a sharp fall in commodity prices and the policies that can shield it from such a shock. To address these questions, this paper takes a long term (4 decade) view at emerging markets' commodity dependence, the history of commodity price busts and the role of policies in mitigating or amplifying their economic impact. The paper highlights the stark difference in trends between Latin America - one of the most vulnerable regions given its high, and rising, commodity dependence - and emerging Asia - which has evolved from being a net exporter to a net importer of commodities in the last 40 years. We find evidence, however, that while commodity dependence is an important ingredient, a country's ultimate degree of vulnerability to commodity price shocks is to a great extent determined by the flexibility and quality of its policy framework. Policies in the run-up of sharp terms-of-trade drops - especially when those are preceded by booms - play a particularly important role. Limited exchange rate flexibility, a weak external position, and loose fiscal policy tend to amplify the negative effects of these shocks on domestic output. Financial dollarization also appears to act as a shock "amplifier."