Nothing affected in her reviews – just a reader engaging with writing and being frank and natural with her opinions – I like this!
Source: Musing on The Brontë Sisters
Nothing affected in her reviews – just a reader engaging with writing and being frank and natural with her opinions – I like this!
Source: Musing on The Brontë Sisters
Tinapa! Dying still breezes
Drying Mango trees
Yawning empty coconut leaves
melons and torsos
that no longer flutter
Even in an earthquake
A testimony to waste
The challenge here is to combine growth with equity. Growth without Equity = widening social cleavage!
By iMFdirect
Versions in Français (French), and Español (Spanish)
In the past two decades, low-income economies have seen a rise in growth, with fewer living in poverty. Yet inequality in many countries has remained virtually unchanged.
A recent IMF paper explains how the design of policies can matter to spread the economic benefits of growth more broadly.
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Makes a case for more MFIs in developing economies!
By iMFdirect
Did you know that while many people in advanced economies have multiple bank accounts, there are barely two bank accounts for every ten people in low-income economies? Access to financial services is essential to spread the fruits of economic growth to all, not just to the fortunate few.
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A sticky subject gets a balanced search light! well, almost.
by
Noel Ihebuzor
Towards food security and sufficiency!
By Rabah Arezki
Agriculture and food markets are plagued with inefficiencies that have dramatic consequences for the welfare of the world’s most vulnerable populations. Globally, farm subsidies amount to over $560 billion a year—equivalent to nearly four times the aid given to developing countries by richer ones. Major emerging-market nations have increased subsidies rapidly, even as rich nations cut theirs drastically. Meanwhile, tariffs on farm products remain a major point of contention in global trade talks.
One third of global food production goes to waste, while food insecurity is still rampant in developing countries. Even with the explosion of agricultural productivity since the middle of the 20th century, food security remains a challenge for much of the developing world. Food-calorie production will have to expand by 70 percent by 2050 to keep up with a global population that’s forecast to grow to 9.7 billion from last year’s 7.3 billion…
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Inclusive growth, Yes! But have policies that do better targeting and BIA! A worthy read.
Versions in: عربي (Arabic), 中文 (Chinese), Français (French), 日本語 (Japanese), Português (Portuguese), and Русский (Russian)
Growth is essential for improving the lives of people in low-income countries, and it should benefit all parts of society.
Traveling through Africa in the last few days, I have been amazed by the vitality I have witnessed: business startups investing in the future, new infrastructure under construction, and a growing middle class. Many Africans are now making a better living and fewer are suffering from poverty. My current host, Uganda, for example, has more than halved its absolute poverty rate to about 35 percent from close to 90 percent in 1990.
But we have also seen a flip side. Poverty, of course, but inequality as well remain stubbornly high in most developing countries, including in Africa, and too often success is not shared by all.
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Useful Read.
(Versions in Français and Português)
Rising inequality is both a moral and economic issue that has implications for the general health of the global economy, and impacts prosperity and growth.
So it’s not surprising that reducing inequality is an integral part of the Sustainable Development Goals adopted by world leaders at the United Nations summit in September. I often discuss with my colleagues where sub-Saharan Africa stands with respect to these objectives. Unfortunately, the region remains one of the most unequal in the world, on par with Latin America (see Chart 1). In fact, inequality seems markedly higher at all levels of income in the region than elsewhere (see Chart 2).
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