Entering the 21st Century: World Development Report, 1999/2000Shahid Yusuf World Bank Publications, 1999 - 300 pages "The development landscape is being transformed confronting policymakers with new challenges and calling into question existing practices. " Policymakers in the next century will need to pursue development across a transformed economic, political, and social landscape. 'Entering the 21st Century' examines the contours of the changing development landscape and charts the way forward. The 'World Development Report 1999/2000', the 22nd edition in this annual series, focuses on two forces of change: the integration of the world economy and the increasing demand for self government, which will affect responses to key issues such as poverty reduction, climate change, and water scarcity. The forces of globalization and localization will require nation states to sustain a dynamic equilibrium with international and subnational partners. The nature of this equilibrium will have far reaching implications for the gains from trade and capital flows, the fruitfulness of global environmental agreements, the pace of regional growth, and the scope of urban development. By drawing on a wealth of recent research on cross-country experience, the report proposes a rich menu of rules and policies that can serve as the ingredients of a comprehensive approach to development. It explores their applicability, for example, in the cases of urban development in Pakistan and decentralization in Brazil. The challenges remain great, but the opportunities available in the new century hold out prospects for a better future. The report also includes selected 'World Development Indicators'. The 'World Development Report 1999/2000' provides invaluable guidance for decisionmakers in the next century. |
From inside the book
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Page viii
... debt than before A growing pool of institutionally managed funds is invested abroad 71 71 3.4 A few developing countries received the lion's share of FDI invested outside industrial countries in 1997 REF 70 73 3.5 Bank intermediation ...
... debt than before A growing pool of institutionally managed funds is invested abroad 71 71 3.4 A few developing countries received the lion's share of FDI invested outside industrial countries in 1997 REF 70 73 3.5 Bank intermediation ...
Page 7
... debt flows Portfolio equity flows direct investment Note : Private debt flows include bank loans and bonds . The Republic of Korea is included in the figures for developing countries . Source : World Bank , Global Development Finance ...
... debt flows Portfolio equity flows direct investment Note : Private debt flows include bank loans and bonds . The Republic of Korea is included in the figures for developing countries . Source : World Bank , Global Development Finance ...
Page 16
... debt crises in Latin America . " mary In the late 1960s the attention of policymakers began to shift toward an emphasis on human capital , which is often measured in terms of school enrollment ( as a proxy for education ) and life ...
... debt crises in Latin America . " mary In the late 1960s the attention of policymakers began to shift toward an emphasis on human capital , which is often measured in terms of school enrollment ( as a proxy for education ) and life ...
Page 32
... debt crises of the 1980s and the meltdown of the East Asian economies in the late 1990s may continue to occur , perhaps in even more dramatic forms . And while countries have begun ini- tiating responses to important environmental ...
... debt crises of the 1980s and the meltdown of the East Asian economies in the late 1990s may continue to occur , perhaps in even more dramatic forms . And while countries have begun ini- tiating responses to important environmental ...
Page 36
... debt to equity financing or to foreign direct investment , both because they did not want foreign interests controlling major segments of the economy and because domestic owners of major cor- porations feared losing control.28 The mood ...
... debt to equity financing or to foreign direct investment , both because they did not want foreign interests controlling major segments of the economy and because domestic owners of major cor- porations feared losing control.28 The mood ...
Other editions - View all
Entering the 21st Century - Development International Bank for Reconstruction and Development No preview available - 1998 |
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agreements agricultural Arab Belarus benefits biodiversity Brazil Burkina Faso capital flows Central African Republic central government China cities climate change competition costs Côte d'Ivoire coun D.C. Processed debt decentralization devel developing countries domestic East Asia economic growth effective efficient elected emissions environment environmental Eritrea ernments estimates expenditure exports federal firms fiscal foreign direct investment funds global growth rate households important improve increase India Indonesia industrial countries infrastructure institutions investors issues Kazakhstan Korea labor land Latin America levels liberalization macroeconomic ment middle income million municipal Myanmar nomic percent policies political poverty poverty line production reduce reform regional regulations regulatory Republic responsibilities role rural social sources Sub-Saharan Africa subnational governments subsidies Tajikistan Tanzania tion tional trade U.S. dollars United urban population Uruguay velopment Washington World Bank World Development Report