Intro -- CONTENTS -- Cover -- Title -- Abstract -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- I. Executive Summary -- II. Peru's Fiscal Challenges and Vulnerabilities -- III. Reorienting the Budget Toward Pro-Poor Expenditure -- IV. Improving the Efficiency of Public Expenditure -- V. Addressing the Promises and Risks of Decentralization -- VI. Upgrading the Civil Service -- VII. Improving Governance and Reducing Corruption -- VIII. Fine-Tuning Fiscal and Environmental Mining Policies -- Annex A. A Public Debt Sustainability Analysis for Peru -- Annex B. The Fiscal Effort Required for a Sustained Structural Deficit -- Annex C. Questionnaire on Public Financial Management -- Annex D. A Public Expenditure Tracking Survey: Methodological Issues -- Annex E. Public Enterprise Reform in Peru: Introducing Management Contracts at FONAFE -- Annex F. A Methodology for Functional Reviews and for Analyzing Functional Prospects -- Annex G. List of Background Papers -- Statistical Appendix -- Bibliography -- Map of Peru -- LIST OF TABLES -- LIST OF FIGURES -- LIST OF BOXES.
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Afghanistan has come a long way since emerging from major conflict in late 2001. The economy has recovered strongly, growing by nearly 50% cumulatively in the last two years (not including drugs). Some three million internally and externally displaced Afghans have returned to their country. More than four million children, a third of them girls, are in school, and immunization campaigns have achieved considerable success. The Government has supported good economic performance by following prudent macroeconomic policies and it has made extraordinary efforts to develop key national programs and to revive social services like education and health. Nevertheless, Afghanistan remains one of the poorest countries in the world in terms of both per-capita incomes and social indicators, with large gender gaps. The difficult challenge of poverty reduction is made even more difficult by continuing insecurity, weak rule of law, and narcotics. Afghanistan - State Building, Sustaining Growth, and Reducing Poverty provides a greater understanding of the core challenges that lie ahead for Afghanistan and key priorities for national reconstruction. The Afghan economy has been shaped by more than two decades of debilitating conflict and has some very unusual features which this study analyzes. The authors argue that the country must break out of the vicious cycle that would keep it insecure, fragmented politically, weakly governed, poor, dominated by the illicit economy, and a hostage to the drug industry. The study presents key elements for a breakthrough in the next two years but the daunting agenda will require strong commitment, actions, and persistence on the part of the Government and robust support from the international community
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"In March 2001, the Ministry of Health of the Government of Eritrea launched a process to prepare a long-term health sector policy and strategic plan (HSPSP), with a focus on assuring equitable, quality, and sustainable health care. The Ministry outlined an open, participatory, three-step process for developing the HSPSP, with active participation from all partners in the health sector." "This study serves as the preliminary basis for further rounds of discussions and analysis among stakeholders to arrive at a strategic vision for the Eritrea health sector. It incorporates comments received from the Ministry of Health's central agencies, Zoba (regional) health teams, external partners working in Eritrea, and the World Bank Eritrea Country Team."--Jacket
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