Pathways out of poverty : private firms and economic mobility in developing countries

Bibliographic Information

Pathways out of poverty : private firms and economic mobility in developing countries

edited by Gary S. Fields and Guy Pfeffermann

Kluwer Academic , International Finance Corporation, World Bank Group , World Bank Publication, [distributor] for paperback version, customers in the U.S., 2003

  • : alk. paper
  • : pbk. : alk. paper

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Includes bibliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents
Volume

: pbk. : alk. paper ISBN 9780821354049

Description

Until recently, development economists tended to assume a role for private enterprises in reducing poverty, without articulating it explicitly. How private firms contribute to economic mobility and poverty reduction and what governments can do to enhance their contribution is the theme of this book. In developing countries, private enterprise is far and away the largest source of employment and investment and a significant source of government revenue. In addition to these tangible contributions, private enterprise is an important source of less tangible, but critically important, factors such as openness to ideas, innovation, and opportunity. The book presents new evidence, which demonstrates the essential role which private firms are playing in the course of economic development. Throughout, the focus is on economic mobility. Regional case studies ranging from the Far East to Sub-Saharan Africa hone in on the role of entrepreneurship in development. Drawing on the rich materials of the World Bank's Worldwide Business Environment Survey, key policy factors are identified. Special attention is paid to obstacles facing small and medium-sized enterprises. The concluding chapters focus on practical ways in which governments of developing and transition countries can encourage the capacity of poor people to move up the economic ladder.

Table of Contents

I. The Role of the Private Sector: Studies and Evidence.- 1. Reducing Poverty: The Overall Framework.- 2. Escaping from Poverty: Household Income Dynamics in Indonesia, South Africa, Spain, and Venezuela.- 3. Long-term Economic Mobility and the Private Sector in Developing Countries: New Evidence.- 4. Informal Self-Employment: Poverty Trap or Decent Alternative?.- II. The Private Sector at Work: Cases from Around the World.- 5. Generating Upward Mobility: The Case of Korea and Private Sector Development.- 6. The Central Role of Entrepreneurs in Transition Economies.- 7. Opportunities off the Farm as a Springboard Out of Rural Poverty: Five Decades of Development in an Indian Village.- 8. The Problem of African Entrepreneurial Development.- III. The Business Environment.- 9. The Firms Speak: What the World Business Environment Survey Tells Us about Constraints on Private Sector Development.- 10. Obstacles Facing Smaller Business in Developing Countries.- IV. Public Policy And Public Attitudes.- 11. Bringing SMEs into Global Markets.- 12. The Role of Government in Enhancing Opportunity for the Poor: Economic Mobility, Public Attitudes, and Public Policy.
Volume

: alk. paper ISBN 9781402074127

Description

Until recently, development economists tended to assume a role for private enterprise in reducing poverty, but they didn't articulate it explicitly. The new institutional economics literature, with its emphasis on transaction costs, addresses the environment in which private businesses operate in various countries - the "investment climate". Building on this new thinking, Pathways Out of Poverty begins by citing the worldwide drop in the number of very poor people and goes on to identify the ways in which private firms and farms contribute to economic mobility and poverty reduction and what governments can do to enhance this contribution. In four Parts, the editors and contributors address economic mobility, offer numerous global examples, consider the importance of good investment climates, and examine the impact of public policies and public attitudes. Their theory, hard economic analysis, and case studies provide rich and innovative mechanisms for reducing poverty in developing and transition countries.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • P. Woicke. Foreword
  • N. Stern. Part I: The Role of the Private Sector: Studies and Evidence. 1. Reducing Poverty: The Overall Framework
  • G. Pfeffermann, G.S. Fields. 2. Escaping from Poverty: Household Income Dynamics in Indonesia, South Africa, Spain, and Venezuela
  • G.S. Fields, P.L. Cichello, S. Freije, M. Menendez, D. Newhouse. 3. Long-term Economic Mobility and the Private Sector in Developing Countries: New Evidence
  • G.S. Fields, W.S. Bagg. 4. Informal Self-Employment: Poverty Trap or Decent Alternative? W.F. Maloney. Part II: The Private Sector At Work: Cases from Around the World. 5. Generating Upward Mobility: The Case of Korea and Private Sector Development
  • Se-Il Park. 6. The Central Role of Entrepreneurs in Transition Economies and China
  • J. McMillan, C. Woodruff. 7. Opportunities off the Farm as a Springboard out of Rural Poverty: Five Decades of Development in an Indian Village
  • P. Lanjouw, N. Stern. 8. The Problem of African Entrepreneurial Development
  • T. Biggs, M. Shah. Part III: The Business Environment. 9. The Firms Speak: What the World Business Environment Survey Tells Us about Constraints on Private Sector Development
  • G. Batra, D. Kaufmann, A.H.W. Stone. 10. Obstacles Facing Smaller Businesses in Developing Countries
  • B. Weder. Part IV: Public Policy and Public Attitudes. 11. Bringing SMEs into Global Markets
  • K. Hallberg, Y. Konishi. 12. The Role of Government in Enhancing Opportunity for the Poor: Economic Mobility, Public Attitudes, and Public Policy
  • C. Graham.

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