The Organisation's Development Centre was founded in 1962 as one means to study and to try to confront the problems of comparative development and to relate them to experiences in the more advanced economies. This book provides a compendium of that experience.
This book provides a compendium of that experience and looks forward to future policies and strategies, which might provide some solutions to the problems facing developing countries.
Latin America is looking towards China and Asia -- and China and Asia are looking right back. This is a major shift: for the first time in its history, Latin America can benefit from not one but three major engines of world growth.
Hansen, R. (2000), Citizenship and Immigration in Postwar Britain: The Institutional Origins ofa Multicultural Nation, ... Khoudour-Castéras, D. (2009), “Les migrants au cœur de la tourmente économique”, L'économie mondiale 2010, CEPII, ...
... development of e-business might find the return on investment quite low. Over time, as more suppliers and customers use the internet in their front-office and back-office systems and to connect with their trading partners, the benefits ...
... back knowledge and new technology when they return, which contributes significantly to their countries' economic development. For example, the Chinese Institute of Engineers in the United States co-operates with its counterpart in ...
Following on from his The World Economy: a Millennial Perspective, published by the OECD in 2001, in this book, Angus Maddison offers a rare insight into the history and political influence of national accounts and national accounting.
Latin America Argentina oit (various years), Panorama Laboral, America Latina y el Caribe, Lima. Bolivia oit (various years), Panorama Laboral, America Latina y el Caribe, Lima. Brazil ibge (1999), Economia Informal Urbana 1997, Brasil, ...
... research provided they do not disclose individual country scores. Thus, for example, Kraay and Nehru (2004) use CPIAs from 1977 (extrapolated back to 1970) through 2001 and find a significant inverse correlation between the quality of a ...
Francis Xavier was in Japan in 1549– 51, and Jesuits were very successful in getting converts in the south of Japan. Eventually, the number of Japanese Christians rose to about 300 000 (many more converts than the Jesuits made in Goa or ...
... development process, especially if unequal development in China were to create political and social tensions that might hold back economic growth in the long term. Thus an evaluation of the trends in China's regional economies is ...