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Searching with a thematic focus on Debt, Aid and debt in Tanzania
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Learning from experience? a review of recipient-government efforts to manage donor relations and improve the quality of aid
Overseas Development Institute, 2006This paper reviews the efforts of five countries seen as relatively successful examples of recipient-led aid policies and donor management.DocumentThe loan contraction process in Africa: making loans work for the poor; the case of Tanzania
African Forum and Network on Debt and Development, 2004This paper examines how external loans can be better utilised in order to benefit the poor. The study sought to identify existing bottlenecks that continue to perpetuate the debt crisis within the institutional and legislative framework of Tanzania.DocumentResource rich BWIs, 100% debt cancellation and the MDGs
Jubilee Research, 2004This paper argues that higher levels of debt cancellation and grant (aid) flows for Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs) will be essential to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).DocumentOwning the loan: poor countries and the MDGs
African Forum and Network on Debt and Development, 2004This 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 miDocumentStreamlining of structural conditionality: what has happened?
European Network on Debt and Development, 2003This paper analyses the IMF’s experience with streamlining, its main tool for applying structural conditionality more selectively, through the comparison of the experience of three countries - Zambia, Nicaragua and Tanzania.DocumentThe IMF: wrong diagnosis, wrong medicine
Oxfam, 1999Prepared 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.DocumentRealignment of debt service obligations and ability to pay in concessional lending: feasibility and modalities
HIPC Progress to Date, World Bank, 2003This paper studies schemes which have the potential to increase the flexibility of heavily indebted primary producing countries in meeting their debt service obligations by making debt service repayments contingent on the world prices of the commodities they export.DocumentMaking debt relief work: the heavily indebted poor countries initiative
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002The Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative adopted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank in October 1996, looked like a significant step towards ending the debt crisis that has crippled the economies of the world's poorest countries.DocumentFailing women, sustaining poverty: gender in Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers
Christian Aid, 2003More than half the poor citizens of heavily indebted developing countries are women.DocumentMalaria and poverty: opportunities to address malaria through debt relief and poverty reduction strategies
Malaria Consortium, 2001This background paper, produced by the Malaria Consortium, investigates how Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) can support country plans to Roll Back Malaria (RBM). It makes particular reference to case studies in three countries at different stages in the preparation of PRSPs: Cameroon, Tanzania and Uganda.Pages
