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Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt, Governance, Poverty
Showing 171-180 of 254 results
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Participation and intermediary NGOs (World Bank)
Participation & Civic Engagement Group, World Bank, 1999DocumentSituation and prospects for forest conservation and development: FAO State of the World's Forests 1997: Part 1
State of the World's Forests, FAO, 1999DocumentGrowth, employment and redistribution: a macroeconomic strategy (South African Government policy document)
African National Congress, 1999A strategy for rebuilding and restructuring the economy is set out in this document, in keeping with the goals set in the Reconstruction and Development Programme.DocumentNGDO Charter: Basic Principles of Development and Humanitarian Aid NGOs in the European Union (NGDO-EU)
TRIALOG, 1999DocumentWorkers in transition
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1995The outlook is bright for transition economies that are fully embracing market based reform, including appropriate, coherently applied labor policies. In other transition economies, a mix of paternalism and populism could produce partial, timid reform that makes them increasingly unproductive and corrupt.DocumentGovernance and the returns to investment : an empirical investigation
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1995There is a strong statistical link between a country's civil liberties and the performance of its aid financed government investment projects.DocumentWhen is foreign aid policy credible? : aid dependence and conditionality
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1997Disbursements of foreign aid are guided (in part) by the needs of the poor. Anticipating this, recipients have little incentive to improve the welfare of the poor.DocumentAid, Policies, and Growth
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1999Aid has a positive impact on growth in developing countries with good fiscal, monetary, and trade policies. Aid appears not to affect policies systematically either for good or for ill. Any tendency for aid to reward good policies has been overwhelmed by donors' pursuit of their own strategic interests.DocumentDebt Relief for Low-Income Countries and the HIPC Initiative
International Monetary Fund Working Papers, 1997Since the onset of the debt crisis in the early 1980s, many heavily indebted poor countries (HIPCs), continue to have difficulty in paying their external debt-service obligations, largely because of exogenous factors, imprudent debt-management policies, and the lack of sustained adjustment or implementation of structural reforms.Pages
