Are Ghana's Roads Paying Their Way?

Are Ghana's Roads Paying Their Way?
Author: Reuben Gronau
Publisher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 50
Release: 1991
Genre: Roads
ISBN:

The study of road use costs in Ghana showed, first, that such studies are in fact feasible in LDCs, notwithstanding gaps in the data, and second, that they can reveal important inefficiencies in the tax system.

Reducing Labor Redundancy in State-owned Enterprises

Reducing Labor Redundancy in State-owned Enterprises
Author: Jan Svejnar
Publisher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 53
Release: 1991
Genre: Government business enterprises
ISBN:

The severity of labor redundancy has been underestimated because of difficulties in conceptualizing the issue and finding politically acceptable solutions. Schemes to reduce labor redundancy can decrease the wage bill significantly and allow fairly high compensation to the employees laid off yet still allow the government to recoup its costs in a relatively short time.

How Expectations Affect Reform Dynamics in Developing Countries

How Expectations Affect Reform Dynamics in Developing Countries
Author: Francesco Daveri
Publisher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 51
Release: 1991
Genre: Developing countries
ISBN:

Bold moves were effective in trade reform in Chile, Turkey, and Venezuela. But discredited governments, in countries with a history of policy failure, are probably better off sending no signals of policy reform and approaching it in small, cautious steps.

Enforcement of Canadian "unfair" Trade Laws

Enforcement of Canadian
Author: Mark Andrew Dutz
Publisher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 57
Release: 1991
Genre: Antidumping duties
ISBN:

An "economywide" perspective-- examining all allegations of "unfair" dumping and subsidization by comparing the impact on economic efficiency of existing foreign pricing practices with the impact of alternate forms of intervention-- would provide a more rational way of responding to problems that trade laws now deal with.

A Look at Zambia’s Road Financing Strategies: The Impact of Incongruent Policies and Budgets

A Look at Zambia’s Road Financing Strategies: The Impact of Incongruent Policies and Budgets
Author: Yohane Tembo
Publisher: diplom.de
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2015-01-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 3954898519

There are various reasons why the road asset in Zambia has been deteriorating over the past five decades since independence. Much effort to restore the road asset to its original value and keep it maintained in a good and safe condition was initiated in mid 1990s with the launch of the Road Sector Investment Plan – Phase I, which was immediately followed by the launch of a Phase II to run from 2003 to 2013. It is my appreciation that many diagnostic studies into road financing strategies which could have led to inefficient road asset management in Zambia have been undertaken, and various solutions tendered. The author takes cognizance that resource mobilization for road construction and maintenance, and subsequent allocation to respective road programs can often be problematic for an emerging country like Zambia. It has the potential to lead to inefficiencies in road asset management as has evidently been demonstrated in the declining road asset value over time. The political, as well as the economic, landscape plays a vital role in resource mobilization and allocation strategies as much as the institutional and the legal framework do. The failure to clear the backlog of maintenance which normally results, largely, from deferment of scheduled maintenance due to insufficient annual budgetary allocation to the road sector maintenance programs has led to the significant deterioration in road network condition. Exorbitant road construction costs have posed additional challenges to the fiscus, thereby constraining both the quantity and quality of road infrastructure that could be constructed and maintained at any given time. Recent policy drives have been categorical in their preference of new road construction aimed at linking Zambia, over road maintenance, which plays a pivotal role in road asset management. This creates a perception that policy pronouncements are at variance to policy documents which promote sustainable economic development through efficient road investments and could be seen as being paradoxical in that the actual financing strategies are skewed towards road construction, a recipe of comfort for the next election challenge due to increased visibility on the ground, rather than to maintenance, as an astute and effective way of managing the road asset. The difficult of establishing congruence between government pronouncements and actual road business strategies in the implementing agencies has, over the [...]