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Searching with a thematic focus on Poverty in Indonesia
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Social Welfare Systems in East Asia: A Comparative Analysis Including Private Welfare
Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines, 1998Overview of the social welfare systems of five East Asian countries, namely Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore. It analyses the overall costs of welfare as well as income distribution aspects, based on both aggregate data and a programme-by-programme review of their welfare states (presented in annex). Private welfare is introduced in the analysis in two ways.DocumentThe evolution of poverty during the crisis in Indonesia, 1996-99
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 2000This article looks critically at poverty within the context of the Indonesian crisis.DocumentQuantifying vulnerability to poverty: a proposed measure, applied to Indonesia
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 2000This article suggests that vulnerability is an important aspect of households' experience of poverty.DocumentMeasurements of poverty in Indonesia, 1996, 1999, and beyond
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 2000This article indicates that Indonesia's economic crisis has caused a consumption expenditures deterioration in the welfare of Indonesians.DocumentMultilateral trade liberalization and poverty reduction
Federal Agricultural Research Centre, Germany, 2000This study assesses the likely impacts of trade liberalisation on the incidence of poverty. The study attempts to maintain a multi-country focus on liberalisation by comparing experience in 5 countries (Thailand, Zambia, India )Approach:The authors simulate a global model to determine regional price changes owing to a policy experiment.DocumentDifferential impacts of trade liberalization on Indonesia’s poor and non-poor
World Bank, 2000Looks at potential impacts on the poor and non-poor in Indonesia of the commodity price changes which may be caused by proposed trade liberalizations.A general equilibrium global trade model (as used by the Global Trade Analysis Project) is used to simulate price changes of key commodities in Indonesia as a result of two hypothesized trade liberalizations:a unilateral reduction in IndonDocumentImpacts of the Indonesian economic crisis: price changes and the poor
National Bureau of Economic Research, USA, 1999Did the recent financial crisis in Indonesia result in dramatic price increases? In the Indonesian case the very poor appear the most vulnerable.DocumentAsian Development Outlook 2001: publication highlights
Asian Development Bank Institute, 2001The Asian Development Outlook (ADO) features:an assessment of economic trends and prospects for the world and for the developing economies of Asia and the Pacificeconomic profiles, economic management issues, development policy concerns and a forecast for the coming two years for 39 DMCs including newly independent East Timor (N.B.DocumentThe benefits of growth for Indonesian workers
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1996Does improving the conditions of workers in Indonesia require government interventions?Indonesia's rapid, broadly based pattern of growth has led to a spectacular reduction in poverty in the past 25 years.DocumentGeneral equilibrium modelling of trade and the environment / John Beghin ...[et al.]
OECD Development Centre, 1996The environmental impacts of economic activity have become an increasingly urgent concern in both OECD Member countries, as well as in non-Member countries. Research in this area is still in its infancy, and the data required to buttress analytical studies is still sparse.Pages
