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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy in Mozambique

Showing 31-40 of 48 results

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  • Document

    Communication strategies in the age of decentralisation and privatisation of rural services: lessons from two African experiences

    Overseas Development Institute, 2004
    This paper describes the challenges of decentralisation and privatisation of rural services from the perspective of communication strategy development. The author argues that the wave of decentralisation and privatisation in rural services worldwide has created a challenge for rural communities, service providers and local governments.
  • Document

    African Economic Outlook 2003/2004

    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2004
    The third edition of the African Economic Outlook assesses recent economic changes and likely evolutions and challenges on the continent.
  • Document

    Owning the loan: poor countries and the MDGs

    African Forum and Network on Debt and Development, 2004
    This report, commissioned by Christian Aid and AFRODAD, investigates the links between debt management, the build-up of new loans, and the most sustainable ways of financing the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in Malawi, Mozambique, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia, all low-income and highly indebted countries.Key points of the paper include:together, these countries face an estimated mi
  • Document

    Review of Nordic monitoring of the World Bank and IMF support to the PRSP process

    Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2003
    This report details the first joint Nordic monitoring of the World Bank and IMF support to the PRSP process in seven countries: Bolivia, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam and Zambia.
  • Document

    Creating a financial bridge to the private sector

    Global Philanthropy and Foundation Building, Synergos Institute, 2000
    This chapter from the book 'Foundation building sourcebook: a practitioners guide based on experience in Africa, Asia and Latin America' describes several approaches to building a financial bridge between the private sector and community development initiatives.
  • Document

    Land theme paper (sustainable livelihoods)

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2000
    This paper examines the challenges of institutional, organisational and policy reform around land in Southern Africa. It analyses the land situation in South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, and identifies key issues for further research in each of these countries. Findings include:
  • Document

    Private sector participation in water supply: too fast, too soon?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    Is water privatisation being over-promoted? Is private sector participation (PSP) in its current forms likely to promote the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals to provide the poor with reliable, affordable and sustainable, safe drinking water? How do members of poor communities affected by the process judge PSP? 
  • Document

    The IMF: wrong diagnosis, wrong medicine

    Oxfam, 1999
    Prepared as part of Oxfam International's Education Now campaign, this briefing paper evaluates the International Monetary Fund (IMF), offering information, statistics, case studies and recommendations for change.
  • Document

    Study on private sector development in Mozambique

    Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation - NORAD, 2002
    Review of the private sector in Mozambique and the priorities for donor intervention. The report reviews that there is a “big project bias” in Mozambique, therefore it is realistic to suggest that the potential for Norwegian investments in Mozambique would be participation by the bigger Norwegian companies in the large-scale projects within the energy and minerals sector.
  • Document

    Fuel tax in Mozambique

    PRSP Monitoring and Synthesis Project, 2003
    This study considers the impact of a possible rise in fuel tax in Mozambique, which is bound to increase poverty and analyses the magnitude of this effect. In terms of a producer response, it argues that some economic activities are more vulnerable to fuel prices and could collapse more rapidly than a corresponding fall in demand.

Pages