... the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions that govern economic and social interactions among them" (Kaufmann, Kraay and Zoido-Lobaton, 2002: 4-5). The Quality of Growth - Page 137edited by - 2000 - 262 pagesFull view - About this book
| Jeffrey Carmichael, Michael Pomerleano - 2002 - 252 pages
...resources efficiently and formulate, implement, and enforce sound policies and regulations; and (3) the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions...govern economic and social interactions among them. 216 A wide range of international and commercial organizations, including risk-rating agencies, multilateral... | |
| Mr.Sanjeev Gupta, Mr.George T. Abed - 2002 - 580 pages
...clusters corresponding to basic aspects of governance. Two of these, graft and rule of law, summarize the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions that govern their interactions. Government effectiveness and regulatory burden, on the other hand, include various... | |
| Mac Darrow - 2003 - 371 pages
...resources efficiently and formulate, implement, and enforce sound policies and regulations; and (3) the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions...govern economic and social interactions among them.' 3•" See the discussion in chapter II at nn 77-82 and accompanying text, and J Isham, D Kaufman and... | |
| Christopher J. L. Murray, David B. Evans - 2003 - 919 pages
...were used to examine three elements of governance: the process of government selection, the ability to formulate and implement sound policies, and the respect of citizens and the state for institutions which govern interactions. Six aggregate measures of governance were constructed. The... | |
| S. L. Rao - 2004 - 510 pages
...replaced but also the capacity of the government and its institutions to effectively manage its resources and implement sound policies and the respect of citizens...govern economic and social interactions among them. While we may congratulate ourselves on being the largest functioning democracy, the lack of a strong... | |
| World Economic Forum - 2004 - 600 pages
...governments; (2) the capacity to formulate and implement sound policies and deliver public services; and (3) the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions...govern economic and social interactions among them. For measurement and analysis, the three dimensions in this definition are unbundled to comprise two... | |
| Mathias Albert, Bernhard Moltmann, Bruno Schoch - 2004 - 384 pages
...capacity of the government to eftectively manage its resources and implement sound policies, and (iii) the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions...that govern economic and social interactions among them."10 Gleichwohl ist der originäre Adressat der Staat und dessen Leistungsfahigkeit; die „Zivilgesellschaft"... | |
| Deirdre Curtin, Ramses A. Wessel - 2005 - 290 pages
...selected, monitored and replaced, the capacity of the government to effectively manage its resources and implement sound policies, and the respect of citizens...that govern economic and social interactions among them.14 Good governance is, logically, appropriate governance. In this section we would like to transcend... | |
| Mark Svendsen - 2005 - 274 pages
...capacity of the government to effectively manage its resources and implement sound policies; and (iii) the respect of citizens and the State for the institutions...govern economic and social interactions among them (Kaufmann, 2000). In Kaufmann's framework, good governance consists of six interlinked components:... | |
| Donato Masciandaro - 2005 - 594 pages
...governments; 2) the capacity to formulate and implement sound policies and deliver public services; 3) the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions...govern economic and social interactions among them. Furthermore, for measurement and analysis purposes, these three dimensions of governance can be further... | |
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