|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This book sheds new light on the political economy of public
management reform. It examines the new forms of economic
decentralization and macroeconomic adjustment, and discusses their
implications for policy design and regulation.The authors discuss
leading-edge research on public management reform, privatization
and decentralization in both industrialized and aid-dependent
countries, concentrating on the meso-level of institutional
response. Combining theory, case studies and institutional
analysis, they focus on issues including public/private
partnerships, public finance and aid allocation. The authors also
present new ideas on the design of a regulatory framework. This
book will be welcomed by academics and researchers working in the
fields of development studies, development economics, political
economy and international public management as well as policymakers
working for government agencies and NGOs in developing countries.
With the deadline for achieving the 2015 Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) less than a decade away, the uneven progress is
raising important questions about the ability of the international
community to 'scale up' its efforts to finance the goals. Securing
adequate financing for development has thus become the most
pressing issue of the development agenda. This ground breaking
volume, by leading development economists and practitioners,
addresses the central concern for policymakers involved in long
term planning for the MDGs: how to create 'fiscal space' for the
MDGs and strengthen domestic resource mobilization for human
development, while ensuring long-term sustainability and freedom
from reliance on aid. By looking at the evidence with fresh
perspectives, the authors present a novel approach by which fiscal
policy can be made to work for the poor, for the long term.
Published with UNDP and Revenue Watch.
With the deadline for achieving the 2015 Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) less than a decade away, the uneven progress is
raising important questions about the ability of the international
community to 'scale up' its efforts to finance the goals. Securing
adequate financing for development has thus become the most
pressing issue of the development agenda. This groundbreaking
volume, by leading development economists and practitioners,
addresses the central concern for policymakers involved in long
term planning for the MDGs: how to create 'fiscal space' for the
MDGs and strengthen domestic resource mobilization for human
development, while ensuring long-term sustainability and freedom
from reliance on aid. By looking at the evidence with fresh
perspectives, the authors present a novel approach by which fiscal
policy can be made to work for the poor, for the long term.
Published with UNDP and Revenue Watch
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
|