Foreign Aid: New Perspectives

Front Cover
K. L. Gupta
Springer Science & Business Media, 2012 M12 6 - 278 pages
Foreign aid has been an area of active scholarly investigation since the end of the Second World War, but particularly since the early 1950s when a large number of the erstwhile colonies became independent. Few areas of public policy involving the developed and developing countries have aroused more passion and ideological debate than foreign aid.
In spite of the massive amount of research in the field, there is still not enough work in two areas: the first involves the mechanisms through which aid influences the economies of the donor and the recipient countries; and the second, country-specific assessments of the effectiveness of foreign aid. Foreign Aid: New Perspectives is aimed at making a contribution in these two areas.
The contents of this volume are divided into four parts. Part I deals with some theoretical aspects of foreign aid, while the second part analyzes some general policy aspects. Part III turns to the donor experience and includes one paper on the Danish experience. The last part considers the recipient experience and consists of five case studies.

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Contents

Altruism Trade Policy and the Optimality of Foreign Aid
21
Foreign Aid and the Welfare Cost of Inflation 37
36
4
51
International Development Assistance and Food Security 67
66
Is There a Link Between Aid and Trade Flows?
85
Technical Expertise and Indigenization 127
126
9
147
10
171
11
188
Foreign Assistance and Development in Bangladesh
211
Main Phases and Salient Features of Turkish Foreign Aid Experience 233
232
The Macroeconomics of Foreign Aid in SubSaharan
255
Index
275
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