14 p. ; Attributed to Thomas Fuller by Wing and NUC Pre-1956 imprints. ; Place of publication suggested by Wing. ; Reproduction of original in Bodleian Library.
This article investigates the relationship between sectoral government expenditure with economic growth in Ethiopia. In this study, the time series data from the period 1979–2018 is used. Autoregressive Distributed Lag approach to co-integration and error correction model are applied to investigate the short- and long-run impacts of government expenditure on economic growth. Using bound test approach to cointegration, the study revealed that agriculture, health and road expenditure has positive and significant in the long run, while expenditure on health and road has also a positive and statistically significant in short run. Applying the Granger causality test, we found a unidirectional causality running from health, transportation and communication and road government expenditure to growth at the one lag length. Therefore, it is important that the government better to spend on agriculture, health and road sectors of government expenditure for better development on these sectors and also should increase the efficiency of financial resources.
bk 1. Introduction : The politics of abolition revisited -- pt. 1. About KROM : the starting point -- pt. 2. Five major theoretical issues -- bk. 2. The politics of abolition (1974) -- pt. 1. The unfinished -- pt. 2. Pressure group and social structure -- pt. 3. Organization among the expelled -- bk. 3. Scholars and prisoners on prisons.
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How do authoritarian regimes deal with pressure from the international community? China's leaders have been subject to decades of international attention, condemnation, resolutions, boycotts, and sanctions over their treatment of human rights. We assume that hearing about all this pressure will make the public more concerned about human rights, and so regimes like the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) should do what they can to prevent this from happening. In this book, Jamie Gruffydd-Jones argues that while international pressure may indeed embarrass authoritarian leaders on the international stage, it may, in fact, benefit them at home. The targets of human rights pressure, regimes like the Communist Party, are not merely passive recipients, but actors who can proactively shape and deploy that pressure for their own advantage.
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