Learning by Exporting the Case of Mozambican Manufacturing
In: UNU-WIDER Working Paper No. 03/2014; 2014(066)
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In: UNU-WIDER Working Paper No. 03/2014; 2014(066)
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In: UNU-WIDER Working Paper 08/2012; 2012/73(WP/073).
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In: UNU-WIDER working paper 09/2011; 2011/51
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In: Routledge Studies in Development Economics, 72
World Affairs Online
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Band 69, S. 1-5
The notion that foreign aid harms the institutions of recipient governments remains prevalent. We combine new disaggregated aid data and various metrics of political institutions to re-examine this relationship. Long-run cross-section and alternative dynamic panel estimators show a small positive net effect of total aid on political institutions. Distinguishing between types of aid according to their frequency domain and stated objectives, we find this aggregate net effect is driven primarily by the positive contribution of more stable inflows of 'governance aid'. We conclude the data do not support the view that aid has had a systematic negative effect on political institutions.
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In: Journal of development economics, Band 110, S. 291-302
ISSN: 0304-3878
Agriculture and food cultivation production remains a key sector in the Vietnamese economy in terms of productive activities, income generation, and national export earnings. Higher world market prices should therefore in principle have a beneficial impact on rural farmers. This is based however on the assumption that world prices are transmitted and that farmers have the capacity to respond. In addition, many poorer farm households may be net consumers. Using data from the Vietnam Access to Resources Household Survey (VARHS) and the Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey (VHLSS) combined with available macro-data, this paper investigates how global price changes appear to have impacted on rural welfare in Vietnam during 2006-12. In this paper we study the case of rice in Vietnam, in the context of the 2008 food price spike. We analyse the responses of domestic producer and consumer prices, and discuss the policy actions taken by the government to help reduce the impact on consumers, as well as to continue to encourage production. We also look at the distributional impact of the resulting domestic price changes, using data from a specialist rural household survey to look at production response. Vietnam was effective in taking policy actions to limit the extent of transmission of the world price changes; and more poorer households benefitted from the price increase than lost.
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In: Journal of Development Economics, DOI: 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2014.01.011
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In: Journal of Development Studies 44(4):485-503. DOI: 10.1080/00220380801980798 (2008)
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In: UNU-WIDER Working Paper No. 01/2014; 2014/030(030)
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In: Land Tenure Reforms in Asia and Africa: Assessing Impacts on Poverty and Natural Resource Management, Chapter: Access to Land: Market and Non-market Land Transactions in Rural Vietnam (ch.7), Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan:, Editors: Stein Holden, Keijiro Otsuka, Klaus Deininger, pp.162-186, 2013
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