How to manage an aid exit strategy : the future of development aid / Derek Fee.
Material type:
- 1780320299
- 9781780320298 (pbk)
- 9781780320304 (hbk)
- 1780320302
- HC59.7Â .F354 2012

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MARY IMMACULATE LIBRARY Open Shelf | HC59.7 .F354 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 75942 |
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HC 59.7.C43 1983 Rural Development : | HC59.7.D442008 Development and under-development: The political economy of global inequality | HC59.7 .E22 2006 The white man's burden : | HC59.7 .F354 2012 How to manage an aid exit strategy : | HC 59.7 .G48 Why is the Third World poor? | HC 59.7 .G48 Why is the Third World poor? Translated by Kathryn Sullivan. xv, 143 p. 21 cm. | HC59.7.G5W57 Globalization, growth and poverty |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [234]-246) and index.
The state of aid -- A short history of development aid -- The development aid business -- Domestic resource mobilization -- Trade liberalization -- The BRICS -- Regional integration -- Microfinance -- Remittances -- Non-governmental organizations and philanthropic foundations -- Towards an aid exit strategy.
"After almost forty years of development aid most commentators agree that aid as we know it has not worked. Aid fatigue is suffered on both the donor and recipient sides, with a wide divergence between those who call for a radical overhaul of aid delivery methods, those who advocate a complete end to development aid and those who continually demand significant increases in aid flows. How to Manage an Aid Exit Strategy provides a refreshing, insightful and comprehensive analysis of how an exit may actually be possible - drawing on real experience and as such supplying a simple summary of recommended policy steps. The author thoroughly reviews aid for trade, regional integration and microfinance and a host of other solutions that have been proposed - arguing that an exit strategy for both donors and the least developed countries will have to consider the optimal combination of these specific initiatives to best satisfy the necessity of development and at the same time solve the problems of conventional aid."--Publisher's website.
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