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poorest countries Tagged Articles
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3.1.3 Market-driven training reforms: Training priorities, resources and reorientation
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| During the 1990s, the World Bank has taken the lead in promoting the benefits of pro-market reforms for VET. |
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Many Countries Fall Short
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| There is substantial scope to make budgets more growth oriented. |
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Enhancing Microfinance Efficacy through Integrated Services
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| Most microfinance organizations serve what we define as the extreme and the moderate
poor. |
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Overview of Microfinance
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| Because the term microfinance is
used in many different contexts, it can
sometimes be oversimplified and viewed
in a skewed or narrow perspective. |
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5.4 Solidarity in a globalizing world: Working Out of Poverty
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| Despite efforts to reduce the burden of excessive debt, many lowincome
countries are still using a substantial portion of their resources to pay
interest and repay the capital of earlier borrowing. |
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5.3 Harnessing the potential and sharing the stresses of economic integration: Working Out of Poverty
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| Many low-income countries are already closely connected to international
markets, with exports and imports of goods and services constituting
on average 43 per cent of GDP for the LDCs in 1997-98. |
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2.4 Agricultural workers and rural communities: Working Out of Poverty
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| A better understanding of the social and economic dynamics of rural
communities is critical to the reduction and eradication of poverty. The
world’s poorest countries are those most dependent on agriculture. Threequarters
of the people in extreme poverty live in rural areas. |
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1.12 Ensuring incomes and basic social security: Working Out of Poverty
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| The Declaration of Philadelphia and a number of international labour
standards recognize access to an adequate level of social protection as a basic
right for all. |
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Do Africans Ever Learn? Lessons from 10,000 nameless black men
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| I found this topic written by James Shikwati, Director Inter Region Economic Network very interesting. It gives a rather interesting perspective of the Africa stemming from way back in the late 1800s through to the present times. What lessons has the continent learnt from experiences such as slave trade among others. |
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Other poorest countries Related Articles
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1.7 Promoting entrepreneurship: Working Out of Poverty
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| The tools developed by the ILO to promote micro and small enterprises
can be targeted to meet the needs of the poorest. |
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1.13 Working safely out of poverty: Working Out of Poverty
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| The poorest workers are the least protected. More often than not, prevention
of occupational accidents and diseases is missing from the agenda
where they work. Hazardous work takes its toll on the health of workers and
on productivity. It is unacceptable that the poor must be resigned to facing
disproportionate risks to their safety and health because they are poor.
South Asian countries are tackling hazards to workers, communities and the
environment in the ship-breaking industry, and the ILO is working with
them and other international partners to do so. We are showing that improvements
can be made in working conditions and the environment in
micro and small informal enterprises by low-cost investments that also raise
productivity. |
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2.4 Agricultural workers and rural communities: Working Out of Poverty
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| A better understanding of the social and economic dynamics of rural
communities is critical to the reduction and eradication of poverty. The
world’s poorest countries are those most dependent on agriculture. Threequarters
of the people in extreme poverty live in rural areas. |
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3.6 Securing incomes: Working Out of Poverty
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| Societies at all levels of development face the challenge of organizing
systems to provide security against contingencies such as sickness, accident,
death of the main breadwinner, disability, old age, maternity and unemployment
that make individuals, families and communities vulnerable to poverty.
Through solidarity and fair burden sharing, social security systems contribute
to human security, dignity, equity and social justice. They are also a foundation
for political inclusion, empowerment and the development of
democracy. Half of the world’s population is excluded from any type of
social security protection, with the rate of coverage varying from almost
100 per cent in some industrialized countries to less than 10 per cent in the
poorest developing countries. |
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3.7 Tackling work-related health hazards: Working Out of Poverty
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| Most workers living in poverty lack basic health and welfare services
and work in an unhealthy and unsafe working environment. For many, their
home and workplace are one and the same place. Vulnerability to disease
and poor health thus result from a combination of poor living and working
conditions. Most workers in the informal economy work in precarious and
unsafe conditions, without sanitary facilities, potable water or proper waste
disposal. Every year, more than 2 million people die of work-related accidents
and diseases. In many developing countries, death rates among workers
are five to six times those in industrialized countries. More than
160 million workers fall ill each year as a result of workplace hazards. The
poorest and least protected – often women, children and migrants – are
among the most affected. |
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Sub-Saharan Africa Learning What Works
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| Africa is the world's poorest continent. But for the first time in a generation—amid all the bad news—there is hope for change. An increasing number of countries in sub-Saharan Africa are showing signs of economic progress, reflecting the implementation of better economic policies and structural reforms. |
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Market access: Provisions of Agreement on Agriculture
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| An often-mentioned problem of developing countries’ agricultural export has been the lack
of access to developed countries' markets, due to the institution of a myriad of import
controls and other restrictions. This has largely undermined the growth prospects of
developing countries whose development strategy relied on agricultural exports. |
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Export Subsidies by Developed Countries: Barriers to African External Trade
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| While advocates of liberalization in the economies of the developing countries have
called for reduction in subsidies, the high levels of subsidies in developed countries have
increased significantly especially in the OECD countries. |
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A new financial architecture for expanding sustainable energy and agribusiness
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| Many of the impacts unavoidably to come over us in the next decades until stabilized, will fall most heavily on the poorest and most vulnerable communities in developing Countries with the least ability to adapt. Technical and financial assistance will be needed by particularly vulnerable, low-income developing countries to meet their mounting adaption needsKyoto protocol, the declarations as contained in the Millennium Promise (Millennium Development Goals) of the United Nations, the G 8, G 20 and so on have admittedly increased the awareness of politicians that our planet is in danger by Climate Change, Global Economic Crises and political instability. However the practical results were up to date more than poor. We are today from the Millennium Promises more miles away than five or six years ago, and the economic crisis of 2008 is |
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Preparing for the Pinch in 2011
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| Great Britain was once of the lowest VAT charging countries in Europe, but thanks to the emergency Budget it will soon rise to 20%. But what exactly is VAT, what is it charged on and how does it compare to other countries? |
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