ABSTRACT

In this volume, world-renowned contributors, including Martin Ravallion, Michael Kremer and Robert Townsend, deal with the institutional characteristics of poverty resulting from the time pattern of aid, the nature of financial systems and the political economy of budgetary decisions. Going beyond the traditional literature on poverty, this original book deals with themes of broad interest to both scholars and policymakers in a clear yet technically sophisticated manner.

Departing from conventional methods employed in poverty studies, these innovative essays enquire into the institutional characteristics of poverty, and using current case studies, they examine the crucial idea that periods of crises seriously affect poverty.

part |109 pages

Part I Issues in macroeconomics and poverty

chapter |11 pages

Can public policies lower poverty?

An overview
Size: 0.38 MB

chapter |22 pages

1 Macroeconomic policies and poverty reduction

Stylized facts and an overview of research
Size: 0.47 MB
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chapter |40 pages

3 Trade, growth, and poverty

A selective survey
Size: 0.60 MB

part |75 pages

Part II Public finances

chapter 4|11 pages

Odious debt

Size: 0.10 MB

chapter 5|25 pages

Aid and fiscal management

Size: 0.94 MB

chapter 6|21 pages

Who is protected?

On the incidence of fiscal adjustment
Size: 0.30 MB

chapter 7|16 pages

Understanding the evolution of inequality during transition

The optimal income taxation framework
Size: 0.36 MB

part |81 pages

Part III Finance and trade

chapter 8|41 pages

Evaluation of financial liberalization

A general equilibrium model with constrained occupation choice
Size: 1.45 MB

part |103 pages

Part IV Crises and shocks

chapter 11|22 pages

Growth and shocks

Evidence from rural Ethiopia
Size: 0.20 MB
Size: 0.71 MB