Development finance : innovations for sustainable growth

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Bibliographic Information

Development finance : innovations for sustainable growth

Nicholas Biekpe, Danny Cassimon, Andrew William Mullineux, editors

Palgrave Macmillan, c2017

  • : softcover

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Note

Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st ed. 2017

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book presents a broad range of empirical research papers covering key issues in development finance. Despite having gained significant momentum in Africa and other emerging economies, textbooks and research publications on development finance are still very limited. This book shines a light on the main focal areas of the international 'finance for development' agenda and outlines innovative approaches to enhance economic growth and development finance to contribute towards realizing global sustainable development goals. Chapters from expert contributors cover topics such as domestic resource mobilization, debt relief, microfinance, financial sustainability, tax buoyancy, Foreign Direct Investment, foreign capital flows, and labour productivity. This book serves as a valuable reference tool for researchers, students and practitioners in this field.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Domestic Resource Mobilization in Africa: Capacity Imperatives.- Chapter 2: A Chameleon Called Debt Relief: Aid modality equivalence of official debt relief to poor countries.- Chapter 3: The Impact of Microfinance on Household Livelihoods: Evidence from Rural Eritrea.- Chapter 4: Financing Structure and Financial Sustainability of Selected SADC Micro Finance Institutions.- Chapter 5: Tax buoyancy: A comparative study between Kenya and South Africa.- Chapter 6: Foreign Direct Investment and Economic Growth: The Structural Vector Autoregressive Approach for South Africa.- Chapter 7: Foreign capital flows and output growth volatility in selected sub-Saharan African countries.- Chapter 8: Labour Productivity and Capital Accumulation - Remittance effect in the case of Africa.

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