Eliminating Human Poverty: Macroeconomic and Social Policies for Equitable Growth

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Zed Books, 2007 - 432 pages

This book focuses on the provision of basic social services - in particular, access to education, health and water supplies - as the central building blocks of any human development strategy. The authors concentrate on how these basic social services can be financed and delivered more effectively to achieve the internationally agreed Millennium Development Goals.

Their analysis, which departs from the dominant macro-economic paradigm, deploys the results of broad-ranging research they led at UNICEF and UNDP, investigating the record on basic social services of some 30 developing countries. In seeking to learn from these new data, they develop an analytical argument around two potential synergies: at the macro level, between poverty reduction, human development and economic growth, and at the micro level, between interventions to provide basic social services. Policymakers, they argue, can integrate macro-economic and social policy. Fiscal, monetary, and other macro-economic policies can be compatible with social sector requirements. They make the case that policymakers have more flexibility than is usually presented by orthodox writers and international financial institutions, and that if policymakers engaged in alternative macro-economic and growth-oriented policies, this could lead to the expansion of human capabilities and the fulfillment of human rights. This book explores some of these policy options.

The book also argues that more than just additional aid is needed. Specific strategic shifts in the areas of aid policy, decentralized governance, health and education policy and the private-public mix in service provision are a prerequisite to achieve the goals of human development. The combination of governance reforms and fiscal and macro-economic policies outlined in this book can eliminate human poverty in the span of a generation.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Public expenditure on basic social services
6
Mobilizing domestic and external resources
7
Macroeconomic policies and institutions for propoor growth
57
The inadequacy of public spending on basic social services
97
The distribution of benefits of health and education spending
134
Policies to enhance efficiency and improve delivery
154
Governance reforms to address the systemic problems
211
Promoting complementarity between public and private
235
Taxation and mobilization of additional resources
277
The consistency between aid and trade policies
319
Conclusion
358
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