Financing Development: The G8 and UN ContributionThis volume assesses the current practice and perspectives of the major developed world regions represented in the G8. It looks at the prospects for meeting the Millennium Development Goals in the most impoverished region of Africa and the way trade and finance instruments can help. |
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Introduction Arguments and Conclusions | 3 |
African Finance and Lack of Development | 10 |
Has the G8 Summit Met Its Objectives? The Answers from Gleneagles | 25 |
Gleneagles G8 Summit Perspectives | 43 |
Appendix 41 The Concert Equality Model of G8 Summit Performance | 73 |
Making Poverty History or Confronting | 79 |
Matured Partnership | 99 |
How Much a Partnership? | 121 |
Appendix 101 Technical Derivation of the Missing Capital | 180 |
What Does International Aid Mean to the | 185 |
A Development Perspective | 201 |
Asymmetry in the PostDoha Trading System | 219 |
Table 131 Number of World Trade Organization Delegates | 222 |
A U S Perspective | 235 |
The American Contribution | 253 |
Annex Documents Issued by the G8 at Gleneagles on 8 July 2005 | 280 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieve Action Action Plan Africa agenda agreed agreement agricultural American approach assistance better billion Blair British Bush challenge clear climate change Commission commitments common continued deal debt debt relief decisions developing countries discussion document dollar domestic economic effective emerging energy European finance foreign Fund future G8 summit Gleneagles global Goals governance growth heads HIPC implementation important improved increase Initiative institutions interest International Monetary investment issues Italy July June leaders leading less London major MDGs meeting Millennium ministers negotiations noted nuclear objectives official organisations participation Partnership percent political poor positive poverty presidency problems produced programme progress Project proposals reduce representatives responsibility Review Round Russia sector showed South statement success sustainable trade United World World Bank