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Agenda / Presentations / Background Papers / Logistics / Photographs
Background Papers
Workshop On “Experiences With
Ex-Ante Poverty Impact Assessments Of Macroeconomic Policies In Bangladesh,
Cameroon, Ghana, The Philippines, And Nepal”
March 13-16, 2006
Washington, DC
CASE STUDIES
Bangladesh Case
Study: Mustafa K. Mujeri, currently Ministry of
Planning, Royal Government of Cambodia and United Nations Development
Programme, Cambodia, formerly at Bangladesh Institute of Development
Studies, Dhaka.
Cameroon Case Study: Samuel Fambon, University of Yaonde II.
Ghana Case Study: Nicholas Adamtey, Integrated Social Development Centre.
Nepal Case Study: Dilli Raj Khanal, Institute for Policy Research and
Development.
Philippines Case
Study: Caesar Cororaton, currently, IFPRI, formerly,
Philippine Institute for Development Studies.
BACKGROUND
READING
Poverty
and Social Impact Analysis: Principles for Good Practice. DFID. (3
Pages)
Principles for
PSIA Process in Policy Cycles and
Stakeholder Participation.
A document produced jointly by GTZ and DFID for sharing with the PSIA
Network. Sabina Schnell, Peter Poulsen, Ann Condy, Mari Tertsunen,
Jeremy Holland. October 2005 (16 pages)
*Analysing Macro-Poverty Linkages: An Overview.
Bernhard G. Gunter, Marc
J. Cohen, Hans Lofgren. Development Policy Review, May
2005. (23 pages)
*Burkina Faso: A
Macro-Economic Approach to Analyze Cotton Sector Reform.
B. Essama-Nssah, Issouf Samaké, and Jan Walliser.
(22 pages)
*Aspects of ‘Quantifying the World: UN Ideas and Statistics'.
Michael Ward. (29 pages)
* Towards a New
Consensus: Poverty Reduction Strategies for Bolivia. Jorge Buzaglo and
Alvaro Calzadilla. (25 pages)
Structural Change and Poverty: Dynamic Analysis of
Bolivian Millennium Trajectories. Jorge
Buzaglo and Alvaro Calzadilla. (16 pages)
Redistributing Global Income to Benefit the Poor. Yuri Dikhanov and Michael
Ward. May 2005. (16 pages)
The Review
of Income and Wealth: An Intellectual History of National Accounting. (Book review; Andre Vanoli, ‘A
History of National Accounting’, IOS Press, Amsterdam, 2005). Michael Ward. (14
pages)
Open on impact? Slow progress in World Bank and IMF poverty analysis.
Lucy Hayes. September 2005 (28 pages)
Business as usual: The World Bank, the IMF and the liberalisation
agenda. Christian Aid. September 2005.
Executive Summary (4 pages)
Full Report (26 pages)
Public Infrastructure
and Growth: New Channels and Policy Implications. Pierre-Richard
Agénor and Blanca Moreno-Dodson. February 2006. (55 pages)
The Macroeconomics of
Poverty Reduction. Pierre-Richard Agénor. 2005. (66 pages)
Linking Public
Investment Programs and SPAHD Macro Models Methodology and Application
to Aid Requirements. Pierre-Richard Agénora, Nihal Bayraktarb, and
Emmanuel Pinto Moreirac. December 2005. (31 pages)
Achieving the Millennium
Development Goals in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Macroeconomic Monitoring
Framework. Pierre-Richard Agénora, Nihal Bayraktarb, Emmanuel Pinto
Moreirac, and Karim El Aynaouid. October 2005. (45 pages)
Books
Globalisation and Poverty Channels and Policy Responses. Edited by
Maurizio Bussolo, World Bank, USA and Jeffery I. Round, University of
Warwick, UK. October 2005:
Pro-Poor
Macroeconomics: Potential and Limitations. Edited by Giovanni Andrea
Cornia. Forthcoming 2006.
Adjustment Policies,
Poverty and Unemployment: The IMMPA Framework. Edited by
Pierre-Richard Agénor, Alejandro Izquierdo, and Henning Tarp Jensen.
Forthcoming 2006. |