Argentina's youth, 6.7 million
between the ages of 15 and 24, are an important, but to a
certain extent untapped, resource for development. Over 2
million (31 percent)... Show More +
have already engaged in risky
behaviors, and another 1 million (15 percent) are exposed to
risk factors that are correlated with eventual risky
behaviors. This totals 46 percent of youth at some form of
risk. Today's youth cohort is the country's
largest ever and it's largest for the foreseeable
future. If policymakers do not invest in youth now,
especially in youth at risk, they will miss a unique
opportunity to equip the next generation with the abilities
to become the drivers of growth, breaking the
intergenerational spiral of poverty and inequality and
moving Argentina back into the group of high-income
countries. If youth are educated and skilled, they can be a
tremendous asset for development. If not, they can burden
society and public finances. Overall, Argentina is blessed
with high enrollment rates in school, low levels of crime
and violence, and moderate to low drug use by youth.
However, youth employment, smoking and binge drinking
(including its effect on traffic accidents), teen
pregnancies, and HIV pose challenges for youth policy. While
most youth in Argentina are educated, skilled, and healthy,
a large group is potentially at risk of engaging in myopic
behaviors, including school absenteeism and leaving,
substance use and abuse, delinquency, crime, and risky
sexual behavior. The consequences of these risky behaviors,
unemployment, adolescent pregnancy, sexually-transmitted
diseases, addiction, incarceration, violence, and social
exclusion, make it difficult for youth to successfully
transition to adulthood, imposing large costs on individuals
and society. Applying the framework of the world development
report 2007, this report examines the five life-changing
transitions that all youth confront: leaving school and
continuing to learn, starting to work, developing and
maintaining a healthy lifestyle, forming a family, and
exercising citizenship. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 48460
Date: April 21, 2009
This book breaks new ground in the
ongoing debate about health finance and financial protection
from the costs of health care. The evidence and discussion
support the... Show More +
need to consider financial protection, in
addition to health status, as a policy objective when
setting priorities for health systems. This book reviews the
Latin American experience with health reform in the last 20
years and the fundamentals of health system financing, using
new evidence to show the magnitude and mechanisms that
determine the impoverishing effects of health events
(diseases, accidents, and those of the life cycle). It
provides options for policy makers on how to protect, and
help household to protect themselves, against this
impoverishment. The authors use empirical evidence from six
case studies commissioned for this report, on Argentina,
Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Honduras, and Mexico. This book
provides policy makers with a solid conceptual basis for
decisions on the contents of mandatory health insurance
benefit packages, choices of financing mechanisms, and the
roles of public policy in this field. It provides an
in-depth analysis of, and organizational alternatives for,
risk pooling and health insurance for financial protection.
It analyzes the urgent need to extend risk pooling to the
informal sector, the challenges for current social insurance
arrangements, and options for policy makers to effectively
extend risk pooling to the informal sector. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 36801
Date: June 20, 2006
Author:
Packard, Truman G. ;
Baeza, Cristian C.
This book is a report on success-success
in trade liberalization and in the removal of trade barriers
so as to integrate Latin American economies into the
international... Show More +
economy. More particularly, this book is about
how several Latin American governments created and managed
safeguards and antidumping mechanisms as part of this
liberalization. The core of this book is a set of studies
describing how seven Latin American countries-Argentina,
Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Peru-have
used these trade instruments. Each country study was
conducted by analysts from that country. Many of the
analysts were high government officials during their
country's liberalization, so they have hands-on
experience with the construction and the management of these instruments. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 34721
Date: July 1, 2005
Author:
Nogues, Julio J. [editor] ;
Finger, J. Michael [editor]
Privatization is under attack. Beginning
in the 1980s, thousands of failing state-owned enterprises
worldwide have been turned over to the private sector. But
public... Show More +
opinion has turned against privatization. A large
political backlash has been brewing for some time, infused
by accusations of corruption, abuse of market power, and
neglect of the poor. What is the real record of
privatization and are the criticisms justified? This report
evaluates the empirical evidence on privatization in a
region that has witnessed an extensive decline in the
state's share of production over the past 20 years. The
book is a compilation of recent studies that provide a
comprehensive analysis of the record of and accusations
against privatization, with important recommendations for
the future. Seven countries are investigated: Argentina,
Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 34428
Date: March 15, 2005
Author:
Garron, Mauricio ;
Serra, Pablo ;
Torero, Maximo ;
Lopez de Silanes, Florencio [editor] ;
Barossi-Filho, Milton ;
Gertler, Paul ;
Macedo, Robert ;
Schargrodsky, Ernesto ;
Sturzenegger, Federico ;
Anuatti-Neto, Francisco ;
Ramirez, Manuel ;
Fischer, Ronald ;
Gledson de Carvalho, Antonio ;
Gutierrez, Rodrigo ;
Lopez-de-Silanes, Florencio ;
Galiani, Sebastian ;
Pombo, Carlos ;
Chong, Alberto [editor] ;
Capra, Katherine ;
Machicado, Carlos
This volume presents a collection of
studies on the dynamics of income inequality based on micro
data. Using a simple but powerful empirical methodology, the
authors... Show More +
analyze the roles of prices, occupational choice,
and educational choice in accounting for household income
and its contribution to inequality. It casts doubt on the
grand theories of growth and income inequality that have
dominated discussions in development economics. It paves the
way for a full-blown, micro-based general equilibrium theory
of income determination and income inequality. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 30596
Date: October 1, 2004
Author:
Ferreira, Francisco H. G. ;
Bourguignon, Francois ;
Lusting, Nora
Trade policy and poverty reduction in
Brazil by Glenn W Harrison, Thomas F. Rutherford, David G.
Tarr, and Angelo Gurgel; Trade liberalization and industry
wage structure:... Show More +
evidence from Brazil by Nina Pavcnik,
Andreas Blom, Pinelopi Goldberg; and Norbert Schady;
Lobbying, counterlobbying, and the structure of tariff
protection in poor and rich countries by Olivier Cadot,
Jaime de Melo, and Marcelo Olarreaga; Social protection in a
crisis: Argentina's plan Jefes y Jefas by Emanuela
Galasso and Martin Ravallion; On the unequal inequality of
poor communities by Chris Elbers, Peter F. Lanjouw, Johan A.
Mistiaen, Berk Ozler , and Ken Simler; Ghost doctors:
absenteeism in rural Bangladeshi health facilities by Nazmul
Chaudhury and Jeffrey S. Hammer; Small-scale industry,
environmental regulation, and poverty: the case of Brazil by
Rajshri Jayaraman and Peter F. Lanjouw. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 38878
Date: September 1, 2004
Author:
Mistiaen, Johan A. ;
Ozler, Berk ;
Jayaraman, Rajshri ;
Tarr, David G. ;
Gurgel, Angelo ;
Pavcnik, Nina ;
Schady, Norbert ;
Cadot, Olivier ;
Galasso, Emanuela ;
Hammer, Jeffrey S. ;
Harrison, Glenn, W. ;
Olarreaga, Marcelo ;
Goldberg, Pinelopi ;
de Melo, Jaime ;
Ravallion, Martin ;
Elbers, Chris ;
Lanjouw, Peter F. ;
Simler, Ken ;
Chaudbury, Nazmul ;
Rutherford, Thomas F. ;
Blom, Andreas
In with the performance of recently
privatized electricity distribution companies. Governments
complain that tariffs have increased without visible
improvements in service.... Show More +
Investors contend that they have
not earned reasonable returns on their investments. Both
sides often express dissatisfaction with the new independent
regulatory commissions established at the time of
privatization. In particular, investors argue that the
commissions have not lived up to their commitments and
almost always side with consumer interests. Some investors
claim that the design of the new regulatory system in many
developing and transition economies is fundamentally flawed.
They often recommend that independent regulatory commissions
be supplemented or replaced by more explicit
"regulation by contract." This paper examines
whether regulation by contract or a combination of
regulation by contract and regulatory independence would
provide a better regulatory system for developing countries
that wish to privatize some or all of their distribution
systems. The paper: Describes the key characteristics of
regulation by contract as it has been implemented in several
developing countries Focuses on how regulatory contracts in
several countries handle certain key issues (pass-through of
power-purchase costs, foreign exchange fluctuations, loss
reduction and the obligation to serve) Describes the
strengths and weaknesses of different approaches for dealing
with disputes that inevitably arise in the application of
regulatory contracts Compares and contrasts some recent
experiences of distribution entities in Latin America and
India. Examines some of Brazil's recent problems that
may have arisen because Brazil adopted a flawed variant of
regulation by contract. The paper concludes with a
discussion of some lessons that can be learned from the
experience of several countries. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 27143
Date: October 1, 2003
Author:
Tonci Bakovic, Bernanrd Tenenbaum, and Fiona Woolf
To improve the likelihood of reaching
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), or more generally
to improve their social indicators, countries (or states and
provinces... Show More +
within countries) basically have two options:
increasing the inputs used to "produce" the
outcomes measured by the MDGs, or increasing the efficiency
with which they use their existing inputs. The four papers
presented in this study look at whether improvements in
efficiency could bring gains in outcomes. The first two
papers use world panel data in order to analyze country
level efficiency in improving education, health, and GDP
indicators (GDP is related to the MDGs because a higher
level of income leads to a reduction in poverty). The other
two papers use province and state level data to analyze
within-country efficiency in Argentina and Mexico for
"producing" good education and health outcomes.
Together, the four papers suggest that apart from increasing
inputs, it will be necessary to improve efficiency in order
to reach the MDGs. While this conclusion is hardly
surprising, the analysis helps to quantify how much progress
could be achieved through better efficiency, and to some
extent, how efficiency itself could be improved. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 26600
Date: June 1, 2003
Author:
Wodon, Quentin ;
Jayasuriya, Ruwan
This study is a comparative assessment
of the regulatory frameworks applicable to dam safety in 22
countries. It is divided into three parts. The first part is
a description... Show More +
of the dam safety regulatory framework in each
of the 22 countries. The countries were selected based on
the availability of information about their dam safety
regulatory frameworks. The second part of the study is a
comparative analysis of these regulatory frameworks. The
analysis attempts to highlight the main similarities and
differences in the approaches adopted by the countries
discussed in the first part of the study. The third part
offers recommendations on what a regulatory framework for
dam safety should contain. It lists essential elemetns that
should be included in all dam safety regulatory frameworks,
as well as elemetns that would be desirable to include in
such regulatory frameworks. This part also identifies and
discusses a number of emerging trends in dam safety. In tis
connection, this part of the study can be seen as providing
a tool kit that can be used in formulating a regulatory
framework for dam safety. This study has seven appendices.
Appendix iv contains a dam safety statute; appendix V is a
dam safety regulation; and appendix vi is a sample
operations, maintenance, and surveillance manual. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 25069
Date: October 31, 2002
Author:
Bradlow, Daniel D. ;
Palmieri, Alessandro ;
Salman, Salman M. A.
This publication provides guidance to
water-sector decision makers and planners on how to deal
with the quality dimension of groundwater resources
management in the... Show More +
World Bank's client countries. There
is growing evidence of increasing pollution threats to
groundwater and some well-documented cases of irreversible
damage to important aquifers. This guide has been produced
in the belief that groundwater pollution hazard assessment
must become an essential part of environmental best practice
for water supply utilities. The guide is particularly
relevant for the World Bank's Latin American and
Caribbean Region, where many countries have initiated major
changes to modernize their institutional and legal framework
for water resources management, but may not yet have
considered groundwater at the same level as surface water,
because of lack of awareness and knowledge of groundwater
issues and policy options. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 25071
Date: September 30, 2002
Author:
Foster, Stephen ;
Hirata, Ricardo ;
Gomes, Daniel ;
D'Elia, Monica ;
Paris, Marta
Conventional fiscal analysis fails to
address contingent fiscal risk. The government budget
process and documentation generally fail to scrutinize the
substantial claims... Show More +
on public resources that are associated
with government contingent liabilities, realized and
potential. This report fills gaps on our understanding of
fiscal risks and develops suitable frameworks for managing
them. It offers new analytical concepts, presents country
case studies, and based on country case studies, provides a
menu of practical ideas for policymakers and scholars to
bring fiscal risk within the ambit of public finance. The
book is divided into two parts: Part I of this book gives an
overview of different approaches to dealing with government
fiscal risks. The country examples in this part offer
additional conceptual approaches and illustrate some of the
discussion in the earlier chapters. Part II presents
analytical and institutional approaches that governments
might consider when facing risks in specific government
programs or sectors. The book indicates that countries
differ greatly in their treatment of contingent liabilities
and other fiscal risks. In this respect, the book
illustrates that contemporary practices have yet to be standardized. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 24888
Date: April 30, 2002
Author:
Brixi, Hana Polackova ;
Schick, Allen
Weathering the storm : the impact of the
East Asian crisis on farm households in Indonesia and
Thailand; by Fabrizio Bresciani, Gershon Feder, Daniel O.
Gilligan, Hanan... Show More +
G. Jacoby, Tongroj Onchan, and Jaime Quizon.
The impact of financial crises on labor markets, household
incomes, and poverty : a review of evidence; by Peter R.
Fallon and Robert E.B. Lucas. Weak links in the chain II : a
prescription for health policy in poor countries; by Deon
Filmer, Jeffrey S. Hammer, and Lant H. Pritchett. Public
intervention in health insurance markets : theory and four
examples from Latin America; by William Jack. Urbanization
in developing countries; by Vernon Henderson. Developing
countries and a new round of WTO negotiations; by Thomas W.
Hertel, Bernard M. Hoekman, and Will Martin. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 24774
Date: March 31, 2002
Author:
Devarajan, Shantayanan [editor] ;
Bresciani, Fabrizio ;
Feder, Gershon ;
Gilligan, Daniel O. ;
Jacoby, Hanan G. ;
Onchan, Tongroj ;
Quizon, Jaime ;
Fallon, Peter R. ;
Lucas, Robert E.B. ;
Filmer, Deon ;
Hammer, Jeffrey S. ;
Pritchett, Lant H. ;
Jack, William ;
Henderson, Vernon ;
Hertel, Thomas ;
Hoekman, Bernard M. ;
Martin, Will
This is the final book in a three-part
series entitled, "Voices of the Poor." The series
is based on an unprecedented effort to gather the views,
experiences, and aspirations... Show More +
of more than 60,000 poor men
and women from sixty countries. The work was undertaken for
the "World Development Report 2000/2001: Attacking
Poverty." This publication is organized as follows:
Each country chapter opens up with a brief life story. These
life stories were chosen because they highlight concerns
raised not only by poor women and men living in that
particular community, but because the same concerns were
echoed in other parts of the country. The chapters then
unfold around particular sets of issues that emerged
repeatedly in group discussions and individual interviews.
While the findings reported in the chapters cannot be
generalized to represent poverty conditions for an entire
nation, the chapters bring to life what it means to be poor
in various communities, in fourteen countries, from the
perspective of poor people. In the final chapter, four major
patterns emerge: Poor people need a diverse set of assets
and capabilities if they are to survive and overcome
poverty. Economy-wide policies and shocks deplete poor
people's assets and increase their insecurity. The
culture of mediating institutions often negatively distorts
the impact of well-intended policies and excludes the poor
from gains. Gender inequity within households is persistent
and children are acutely vulnerable. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 23670
Date: January 1, 2002
Author:
Narayan, Deepa ;
Petesch, Patti [editors]
Nothing impacts the welfare of
individuals and households more directly than employment and
earnings opportunities. In developing countries, labor
market reform is a... Show More +
crucial component for the success of
overall economic policy reforms. Despite success in other
areas of economic reform over the past ten years, Argentina,
Brazil, and Chile continue to face significant labor policy
issues. To reduce the rhetoric around the issues - in
Argentina, a high level of unemployment exists; in Brazil,
the high costs of public employment have created large
government deficits and public debt; and in Chile, there is
a growing income inequality and uncertainty of employment -
the book uses a systematically quantitative approach. The
value of the quantitative methods in analysis is that they
can provide frameworks to better understand the effects of
various policy actions. The results can then be translated
into benefits and costs that policy makers can more easily
explain to their constituents. The policy recommendations
resulting from the issues analyzed in Crafting Labor Policy:
Techniques and Lessons from Latin America may be beneficial
to other developing countries enacting labor market reforms. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 24618
Date: January 1, 2002
Author:
Gill, Indermit ;
Montenegro, Claudio E. ;
Domeland, Dorte
The first World Bank Economists'
Forum was held on May 3-4, 1999. The forum attempts to
answer these questions: How do you recognize a hidden fiscal
crisis? When capital... Show More +
flows are volatile, what types of
policy announcements can help fend off currency crises? Do
government training programs for unemployed workers have an
effect? What infrastructure investments reduce infant
mortality? This book collects nine outstanding papers
presented at the forum. The main theme surveyed in this book
include fiscal policy, capital flows, trade,
decentralization, labor markets, infrastructure, health, and
worker training. The second volume collects eight more
papers, concerned with household behavior and health,
communities and welfare, local governments and basic
services, and firms and governments under uncertainty. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 22086
Date: January 1, 2002
Author:
Devarajan, Shantayanan ;
Rogers, F. Halsey ;
Squire, Lyn [editors]
Financial crises, credit ratings, and
Bank failures : an introduction; by Carmen M. Reinhart.
Default, currency crises, and sovereign credit ratings; by
Carmen M. Reinhart.... Show More +
Emerging market instability : do
sovereign ratings affect country risk and stock returns? by
Graciela Kaminsky, and Sergio L. Schmukler. On the use of
portfolio risk models and capital requirements in emerging
markets : the case of Argentina; by Veronica Balzarotti,
Michael Falkenheim, and Andrew Powell. Impact evaluation of
social funds : an introduction; by Laura B. Rawlings, and
Norbert R. Schady. Supporting communities in transition :
the impact of the Armenia social investment fund; by Robert
S. Chase. An impact evaluation of education, health, and
water supply investments by the Bolivian social investment
fund; by John Newman, Menno Pradhan, Laura B. Rawlings,
Geert Ridder, Ramiro Coa, and Jose Luis Evia. The impact and
targeting of social infrastructure investments : lessons
from the Nicaraguan social fund; by Menno Pradhan, and Laura
B. Rawlings. The allocation and impact of social funds :
spending on school infrastructure in Peru; by Christina
Paxson, and Norbert R. Schady. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 26452
Date: January 1, 2002
Author:
Bourguignon, Francois [editor] ;
Reinhart, Carment ;
Kaminsky, Graciela ;
Schmukler, Sergio L. ;
Balzorotti, Veronica ;
Falkenheim, Michael ;
Powell, Andrew ;
Rawlings, Laura B. ;
Schady, Norbert R. ;
Chase, Robert S. ;
Newman, John ;
Pradhan, Menno ;
Ridder, Geert ;
Coa, Ramiro ;
Evia, Jose Luis ;
Paxson, Christina
This report consists of a collection of
case studies from Latin America combining qualitative and
quantitative research methods for the analysis of poverty
within a... Show More +
social exclusion framework. The first chapter
provides an overview of the differences between quantitative
and qualitative methods, and the gains from using both types
of methods in applied work. The other chapters are devoted
to three case studies on reproductive health in rural
Argentina, the targeting of social programs in Chile, and
social exclusion in urban Uruguay. Each case study was
prepared within the broader context of country-specific
economic and sectoral work at the World Bank. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: WTP518
Date: December 31, 2001
Author:
Gacitua-Mario, Estanislao ;
Wodon, Quentin [editors]
In response to emerging epidemiological
evidence of the toxicity of diesel vehicular emissions,
there is growing interest in substituting conventional
diesel with much... Show More +
cleaner natural gas in cities where ambient
concentrations of particulate matter are markedly higher
than what is internationally considered acceptable. This
paper compares the performance of natural gas and
conventional diesel buses, and outlines the barriers to the
adoption of natural gas buses in developing countries. In
the absence of emissions standards that effectively require
natural gas, natural gas-fueled buses are unlikely to be
adopted because they are more expensive to operate relative
to diesel buses. The social case for replacing diesel with
natural gas a fuel for buses rests on environmental grounds.
If a local government decides that the reduction in air
pollution associated with the substitution of conventional
diesel with natural gas for use in buses is worth the cost,
then it needs to adopt policies to encourage the switch to
natural gas. These might include emissions standards for
buses, or fuel and vehicle taxes that reflect marginal
social costs. The contribution of exhaust emissions from
buses to the ambient concentrations of harmful pollutants
needs to be quantified so that associated health damage
costs can be estimated. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: WTP516
Date: October 31, 2001
Author:
Kojima, Masami
Access to good, reliable public services
is critical for the poor in developing countries if they are
to rise out of poverty. Safe water and sanitation, modern
energy... Show More +
and communications, good-quality basic education and
health services--all contribute directly to individual
well-being, and all improve economic opportunities for
low-income households. The primary challenge now is to
ensure that aid- and tax-funded spending reaches the poor,
that the services this money finances respond to their needs
and preferences, that these services are delivered
efficiently, and that public funds are used in a way that
leverages private financing of service delivery. The cases
gathered in this report tell of efforts to improve the
delivery of services by contracting out their provision and
linking the payment of subsidies to the delivery of services
to targeted groups--illustrating aspects of an approach that
the authors call "output-based aid." The cases
highlight varied attempts to sharpen the focus on the
objectives of aid and public spending, to improve incentives
for efficiency and innovation, to expand opportunities for
mobilizing private financing to meet social objectives, and
to enhance accountability in the use of pubic resources. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 22928
Date: August 31, 2001
Author:
Brook, Penelope J. ;
Smith, Suzanne M. [editors]
The first World Bank Economists'
Forum was held on May 3-4, 1999. The forum attempts to
answer these questions: How do you recognize a hidden fiscal
crisis? When capital... Show More +
flows are volatile, what types of
policy announcements can help fend off currency crises? Do
government training programs for unemployed workers have an
effect? What infrastructure investments reduce infant
mortality? This book collects nine outstanding papers
presented at the forum. The main theme surveyed in this book
include fiscal policy, capital flows, trade,
decentralization, labor markets, infrastructure, health, and
worker training. The second volume collects eight more
papers, concerned with household behavior and health,
communities and welfare, local governments and basic
services, and firms and governments under uncertainty. Show Less -
Type: Publication
Report#: 22086
Date: March 31, 2001
Author:
Devarajan, Shantayanan ;
Rogers, F. Halsey ;
Squire, Lyn [editors]