Spelling suggestions: "subject:"conomic colicy"" "subject:"conomic bpolicy""
811 |
Enhancing the capacity of policy-makers to mainstream gender in trade policy and make trade responsive to womenâs needs : A South African perspectiveNkuepo, Henri J. January 2010 (has links)
<p>The impact of trade policies on the pursuit of gender equality is often ignored. Recognising the link between trade and gender, this dissertation aims to enhance the capacity of policy-makers to mainstream gender in trade policy and to help identify ways for using trade to respond to women&rsquo / s needs in South Africa. In order to meet this objective, it analyses the impacts that trade liberalisation has had on the economy and on gender in general and in South Africa in particular. In addition, it evaluates the impacts on men and women in order to see if trade has contributed to reducing, accentuating or perpetuating gender inequality in South Africa. Findings have confirmed that Trade liberalisation has had both positive and negative impacts on women and men. But, they have also demonstrated that trade liberalisation has affected women and men differently having negative influences on the pursuit of gender equality. The research has, however, concluded that the impact of trade liberalisation on the pursuit of gender equality is influenced by other key factors. As strategy to mainstream gender in trade policies, the research suggests that policy-makers should analyse the implications for women and men of any trade policy before adopting such policy. This analysis would help him/her to see the possible imbalances of the new policy and implement policies and programmes to eradicate them. Also, it will help him/her to identify possible ways for using trade to empower women. The research is based on the idea that the elimination of the existing inequalities will put women at the same stage with men and will, therefore, contribute to women&rsquo / s empowerment in South Africa.</p>
|
812 |
Actions and constraints of the European Union as an international actor : the case of Former Yugoslav crisis / Case of Former Yugoslav crisisChen, Xi Ying January 2011 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities / Department of Government and Public Administration
|
813 |
Poland's influence in the European Union, a perspective of the Eastern partnershipTong, Wei January 2011 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities / Department of Government and Public Administration
|
814 |
The Great Indian Affordable Housing Crisis: Determining the Price and Income Elasticities of Urban Rental Housing DemandManiar, Megha 01 January 2012 (has links)
The Indian urban rental market is complex and yet ever-changing, with the ups and downs of housing demand playing a fundamental role in the affordability and stability of the market. This paper determines the income and price elasticities of demand using the demand function and Slutsky equation, respectively, for the urban rental market in order to help craft suitable national housing policy. Through this analysis, it is determined that the urban rental price elasticity of demand is -0.93 and the income elasticity is 0.81, suggesting that rental price subsidies and private income taxes are the most effective policy measures to ensure affordability in urban India.
|
815 |
Trade Liberalization's Impacts on Welfare: A Comparative Analysis of Chile and MexicoPugin, Veronica H. 01 January 2012 (has links)
For decades, institutions such as the World Bank, IMF, WTO, OECD, US Congress, and EU have encouraged developing countries to adopt trade liberalization to improve their people's welfare and eventually achieve developed country status. In a comparative analysis to examine trade liberalization's impact on labor, this study found that while Chile and Mexico pursued very similar trade liberalization policies, their outcomes were extraordinarily different. Chile now holds the title as the world's model liberalizer while Mexico continues to struggle to liberalize. Chile's effective use of government intervention to absorb adjustment costs determined its success. This study challenges trade theory's dogma against government intervention and concludes with explicit strategies for hoe developing countries can enact targeted social programs and measures to absorb trade liberalization's painful adjustment costs. Trade liberalization can bring prosperity and opportunities for a country, as long as it is paired with effective government intervention to absorb a degree of adjustment costs.
|
816 |
Interests great and petty : Japan's nonperforming loans debates, 1991-1998 / Japan's nonperforming loans debates, 1991-1998Bloch, Jonathan Adam 13 June 2012 (has links)
This dissertation considers the failure of the Japanese government from 1991 through late-1998 to take measures to bring swiftly under control the threat to the nation's finance system posed by nonperforming loans that arose with the collapse of the late-1980s land-price bubble. While some works plausibly argue that this record of delay, and a larger failure of the Japanese state to adjust its general economic policy strategy, can be attributed largely to a progressive fracturing of a 1950s consensus on basic economic policy objectives between relatively internationally competitive firms and firms more dependent on state protection of their business opportunities, this insight has led few scholars to enquire into the role played by advocates of the policy interests of Japan's most competitive large firms in producing the widely lamented policy of delay on nonperforming loans. Counter to the literature's preponderant emphasis on political pressure from protection-dependent firms as impediment to swift state adjustment to nonperforming loans and other economic policy challenges of the late-20th century Japanese state, this dissertation finds that state officials and expert commentators who in debates on nonperforming loans and closely related policy issues strongly advocated dismantling protections on which large numbers of firms depended and in their stead adopting policies more favorable to the firms best able to weather the harsh economic conditions of the 1990s, displayed willingness to tolerate further delay comparable to (and sometimes greater than) that shown by state officials and expert commentators who advocated greater solicitude for the protection-dependent. This finding is based chiefly on a reading of official Ministry of Finance policy statements, transcripts of hearings of relevant Japanese House of Representatives committees, public opinion polls, reporting and commentary published in two national-circulation and two local Japanese newspapers, and a variety of books and longer articles published in the mass-audience Japanese business press. This finding, I argue, suggests a need for more sustained critical analysis of the role of leading business interests in Japan's political processes, which in turn argues for a closer engagement than is now commonly attempted with the work of Karl Marx and Chalmers Johnson, and for following up some preliminary suggestions in the existing literature of an emergent economic policy dimension of Diet party competition. / text
|
817 |
Impact of oil revenue on poverty reduction and local development in Chad : comparative analysis of the pre and post oil era development policiesLoum Mouldessou, Laina Eric. January 2015 (has links)
M. Tech. Comparative Local Development / The research analyses and reviews the existing literature on the impact of oil revenues on development policies in Chad. It focuses on a comparative analysis of policies designed before and after the 2003 oil era such as the National Poverty Reduction Strategies, namely theStrategieNationale pour la Reduction de la Pauvrete 1 and Strategie Nationale pour la Reduction de la Pauvrete 2. The study then draws lessons from the experiences of other countries that have succeeded in promoting oil-led development, in order to propose recommendations for a new oil-exporting country like Chad.
|
818 |
Strategic planning in government: a review ofthe possibilitiesScurfield, Richard Garland. January 1985 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Public Administration / Master / Master of Social Sciences
|
819 |
Plantations and national development : a case study of plantation agriculture in the socio-economic and spatial development of the S.W. Province of CameroonAmbrose, Fossoh Fonge January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
|
820 |
National treatment, transparency, and rule of law : evolving issues on the conformity of China’s legal system with WTO’s principlesWang, Chao 11 1900 (has links)
Following the trends of the Globalization, the principles of Nondiscrimination,
Transparency and Rule of Law, are all becoming the core principles of globalized norms of economic regulation, which have always known to be associated with GATT and the World Trade Organization (WTO).
Following the accession of the People's Republic of China to the WTO, it is well
understood that the requirements for the conformity of laws and regulations inside and
outside of China to WTO are high, especially in terms of the conformity of China's
regulatory system of economic regulations to WTO's Principles of national treatment,
transparency, and rule of law.
This paper will examine the conformity of WTO's Principles of National Treatment,
Transparency, and Rule of Law with China's regulatory system of economic regulation,
especially with a focus on the compliance of globalized norms of economic regulation
with China's local norms and local values, and the legal and political culture. At the same time, this paper aims to discover the institutional approaches that protect and facilitate judicial independence. Attention is also paid to the influences of the institutions system on impartiality and accountability of judicial practice through facilitating judicial independence.
|
Page generated in 0.0691 seconds