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Poor people in developing countries are often affected by droughts,
floods, illness, crop failure, job loss, and economic downturns.
Much of their energy goes into coping with these shocks and into
day-to-day survival. While insurance and credit markets, combined
with widespread social security, provide an important cushion
against poverty in rich countries, the need for immediate survival
may lock the poor into persistent poverty in developing countries.
The poor in developing countries do have informal mechanisms to
cope with risk and misfortune. These are based on income
diversification, risk avoidance, self-insurance by saving together
with family, and community-based mutual assistance. Nevertheless,
the scope of these mechanisms remains limited. Repeated
individual-specific shocks such as illness or pests, or covariate
risks associated with drought, flood, or recession, undermine the
ability of individuals and their families to cope with risk. We now
know much more about vulnerability to risk and how poor people
cope. Even more importantly, we have learned much about the large
long-term consequences of these risks, which condemns many to
persistent poverty and excludes them from economic growth. But
there is much that can be done. The micro-level studies that
underpin this book offer new insights on how effective public
action could be more effective in protecting the vulnerable against
persistent poverty. Policy should focus on providing a
comprehensive menu of ex-ante and post-crisis protection
mechanisms, including new forms of insurance, savings, safety nets,
and the means to strengthen the poor's asset base. Local
communities have a big role to play: public funds should not be
used to replace indigenous community-based support networks; rather
they should be used to build on the strengths of these networks to
ensure broader and more effective protection. With numerous
thematic chapters and case studies of both best practice and of
failure, from a mix of low-income and middle-income countries
across the developing world, this book evaluates alternatives in
widening insurance and protection provision, and makes an important
contribution to the topical field of insurance and risk.
In the last thirty years, the developing world has undergone
tremendous changes. Overall, poverty has fallen, people live longer
and healthier lives, and economies have been transformed. And yet
many countries have simply missed the boat. Why have some countries
prospered, while others have failed? Stefan Dercon argues that the
answer lies not in a specific set of policies, but rather in a key
'development bargain', whereby a country's elites shift from
protecting their own positions to gambling on a growth-based
future. Despite the imperfections of such bargains, China is among
the most striking recent success stories, along with Indonesia and
more unlikely places, such as Bangladesh, Ghana and Ethiopia.
Gambling on Development is about these winning efforts, in contrast
to countries stuck in elite bargains leading nowhere. Building on
three decades' experience across forty-odd countries, Dercon winds
his narrative through Ebola in Sierra Leone, scandals in Malawi,
beer factories in the DRC, mobile phone licences in Mozambique, and
relief programmes behind enemy lines in South Sudan. Weaving
together conversations with prime ministers, civil servants and
ordinary people, this is a probing look at how development has been
achieved across the world, and how to assist such successes.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY
3.0 IGO licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online
and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open
access locations. In recent years, typhoons have struck the
Philippines and Vanuatu; earthquakes have rocked Haiti, Pakistan,
and Nepal; floods have swept through Pakistan and Mozambique;
droughts have hit Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia; and more. All led
to loss of life and loss of livelihoods, and recovery will take
years. One of the likely effects of climate change is to increase
the likelihood of the type of extreme weather events that seems to
cause these disasters. But do extreme events have to turn into
disasters with huge loss of life and suffering? Dull Disasters?
harnesses lessons from finance, political science, economics,
psychology, and the natural sciences to show how countries and
their partners can be far better prepared to deal with disasters.
The insights can lead to practical ways in which governments, civil
society, private firms, and international organizations can work
together to reduce the risks to people and economies when a
disaster looms. Responses to disasters then become less emotional,
less political, less headline-grabbing, and more business as usual
and effective. The book takes the reader through a range of
solutions that have been implemented around the world to respond to
disasters. It gives an overview of the evidence on what works and
what doesn't and it examines the crucial issue of disaster risk
financing. Building on the latest evidence, it presents a set of
lessons and principles to guide future thinking, research, and
practice in this area.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford
Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and
selected open access locations. In one country, the prime minister
pushes for the liberalization of digital finance as a central
pillar of the country's national strategy, while the central bank
almost makes it a criminal offence. In another, the digital
minister tries to scupper the very process to support digital
transformation that the president has asked them to co-lead. This
book gives a ringside seat on seven developing countries'
tumultuous early steps on the path to a reform of the economy and
the government using technology. Written by a group of academics
and practitioners from Oxford at the heart of the process, but
foregrounding the voices of the policymakers and participants, this
book documents and critically assesses efforts to assist a set of
governments to kick-start digital transformation. In doing so, it
offers lessons for policymakers in other countries who want to
pursue similar efforts. Beyond that, however, it is also an
exposition of the process of policymaking more generally in the
2020s, and offers broader insight into how outsiders can play a
sensible role in other reform processes in developing and emerging
countries.
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