Coping with the Disappointing Rates of Return of Development Projects with Environmental Impacts


Book Description

The fundamental political economy of early commitment to grandiose projects of uncertain environmental consequence has not been overturned. Projects with environmental impacts often have unacceptably low rates of return; governments and international agencies frequently fail to reject projects of this type. More realistic evaluations will help. It is important to hold those responsible for appraising a project accountable for their appraisals.




Techniques for Improving Client Relations in Family Planning Programs


Book Description

Four techniques for improving client relations that should be part of systemic change - not applied like bandaids - to make family planning services more effective.




Income Security for Old Age


Book Description

A system for old-age security should probably combine different approaches: mandated savings and annuities; a redistribution of income to old people who did not earn enough when they were young to build an adequate cushion of savings; fiscal incentives for nonmandatory savings and annuities (including tax incentives for job-based pension plans); and an informal system of purely voluntary personal savings and family arrangements.







How Changes in the Former CMEA Area May Affect International Trade in Manufactures


Book Description

Western Europe will be the major trading partner of the Eastern European and former Soviet economies, but their trade with Japan, North America, and developing countries will also expand. Eastern Europe's greater access to Western markets may conflict with the export interests of other developing countries.




How Minilateral Trading Arrangements May Affect the Post-uruguay Round World


Book Description

Fears about how the further spread of free trade areas will affect world trade volumes may be exaggerated - while the dangers of these blocs becoming hostile to each other may have been underestimated. "Managed" trade is far more likely outcome.




The Administration of Road User Taxation in Developing Countries


Book Description

The causes of tax avoidance, of tax evasion, and of the failure to reach full revenue potential from road user taxes lie within tax structures and administrations - and those are the areas that need reform.




Carbon Taxes, the Greenhouse Effect, and Developing Countries


Book Description

A universal case cannot be made for national carbon taxes. Nevertheless, such taxes make eminent sense for many developing countries - on the grounds of equity, efficiency, ease of tax administration, and an improved local environment, even ignoring the potential benefits from controlling global carbon emissions.




Economic Development, Environmental Regulation, and the International Migration of Toxic Industrial Pollution, 1960-88


Book Description

Net displacement of toxic intensity toward developing countries may not have been inevitable in the last two decades. And toxic industrial migration seems to have been the result of restrictive trade policies in the developing countries themselves more than of regulatory cost differences between the North and the South.




Indonesia


Book Description

Indonesia has been remarkably successful in achieving its development objectives over the past 25 years. Although it is still a low-income country, its tradition of sound economic management has laid the foundations for continued progress in the decades ahead. As the Indonesian government formulates its second long-term development plan, issues of environmental quality and sustainability raise new concerns. This report examines environmental issues, assesses their implications for the achievement of development goals, and suggests an action plan that would help to ensure that those goals will be met. The analysis of current environmental conditions and trends and of the likely impact of future growth leads to three main conclusions: - Future growth will depend increasingly on Indonesia's stock of key natural resources and the sustainability of critical ecosystems. -The industrial sector will continue to expand in urban areas, where growing congestion and industrial pollution pose an immediate threat to health and human welfare. This will eventually lead to negative effects on the economy. -As a result of rapid growth, environment- related issues of equity among the population will become increasingly important.