Search

Reset

Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt in Mozambique

Showing 51-60 of 95 results

Pages

  • Document

    A new agenda to eradicate poverty in Africa

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006
    Over 75 million more Africans lived in poverty at the end of the 1990s than a decade earlier. Increasing aid and reforming trade through international campaigns and donor programmes is not working. The role of the state must be changed if poverty in Africa is to be reduced.
  • Document

    Tackling climate change and aid in Africa

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2006
    Climate change is already affecting many developing countries. In Africa, over 70 percent of workers rely on small-scale farming dependent on direct rainfall. Even small changes to weather patterns can threaten food security and health. These impacts present a huge challenge to the coordination of aid efforts and the design of development policies.
  • Document

    Evaluation of general budget support: synthesis report

    DAC Network on Development Evaluation, 2006
    OECD donor countries now channel about US$ 5 billion (some 5 per cent of their aid) directly to the budgets of developing country governments.This report reflects findings from an evaluation conducted by the OECD DAC to assess to what extent, and under what circumstances, General Budget Support (GBS) is relevant, efficient and effective for achieving sustainable impacts on poverty reduction and g
  • Document

    Alignment, harmonisation and coordination in the energy sector, Mozambique

    Scanteam, 2005
    Mozambique has vast energy resources that have considerable potential for national energy-intensive industry and for export, such as hydropower, gas, coal, and perhaps petroleum. It also has large bio-mass and solar energy for more local energy needs.
  • Document

    Mozambique: test case for coordinating effective aid practices?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005
    Debate about effective aid practice has focused on monitoring the performance of recipient governments while overlooking the need to check donor performance. Mozambique, one of Africa’s most aid-dependent states, is working with the G-15 (a grouping of bilateral donors, the European Commission and the World Bank) to ensure transparent and coordinated donor support.
  • Document

    Mozambique’s cashew industry: a better deal needed for women

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005
    Cashew nuts are one of the world’s most valuable processed nuts. Mozambique, once the world’s largest producer, works with communities and the private sector to raise output. However, trade liberalisation, falling prices, new quality requirements and the buyer-driven nature of the cashew-nut supply chain are worsening working conditions.
  • Document

    Perfect partners? the performance of programme aid partners in Mozambique, 2004

    Department for International Development, UK, 2005
    This report provides an assessment of the performance of donors during 2004 in Mozambique, as well as an account of Mozambican perceptions of donors’ activities.
  • Document

    The political economy of the budget process in Mozambique

    Oxford Policy Management, 2005
    This paper discusses the nature of the budget process in Mozambique, a highly aid-dependent developing country with weak institutions.
  • Document

    Progress reviews and performance assessment in poverty-reduction strategies and budget support: a survey of current thinking and practice

    Overseas Development Institute, 2005
    This report describes and analyses the challenges posed by the monitoring and evaluation of Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) and budget support programmes.
  • Document

    Capacity building in Africa: an OED evaluation of World Bank support

    Operations Evaluations Division, World Bank, 2005
    This evaluation assesses World Bank support for public sector capacity building in Africa over the past 10 years.

Pages