Rompre le cercle vicieux : une strategie pour promouvoir la croissance dans un milieu rural sensible aux conflits au Burundi
Keywords
LAND DEGRADATIONECONOMIC POLICY
EXTERNAL DEBT
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
INVESTMENT FUNDS
GENDERS
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES
DEBT LEVELS
ASSISTANCE ORGANIZATION
HOUSEHOLDS
AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES
FOOD FOR EDUCATION
FOOD CROPS
ENTREPRENEURS
ACCESS TO MARKETS
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
AGRICULTURE
LONG-TERM INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOOD CROP PRODUCTION
FOOD SECURITY
CALORIC INTAKE
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS
DEBT RELIEF
HUMAN RIGHTS
AUCTION
LACK OF TRANSPARENCY
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTS
EXPORT CROP
FINANCIAL VIABILITY
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
INCOME GROWTH
DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH
DEFICITS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
LIVING STANDARDS
ECONOMIC REFORMS
GROWTH RATE
EXPORT CROPS
COST-EFFECTIVENESS
ACCESS TO FINANCE
BUSINESS LAW
FAMINE
LOCAL EXCHANGE
INTERNATIONAL BANK
FOOD INSECURITY
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FINANCIAL CAPACITY
CASH CROPS
FINANCIAL SECTOR ASSESSMENT
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
EXTREME VULNERABILITY
LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
FOREIGN CURRENCY
EXPORT EARNINGS
ETHNIC GROUP
FARMERS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
COMPETITIVENESS
AFFORDABILITY
BINDING CONSTRAINT
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
FOOD AID
HUMAN CAPITAL
AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
FOOD SUPPLY
BORROWING
CASH PAYMENTS
EXPORTS
FOREIGN INVESTORS
BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
GROWTH POTENTIAL
INVESTING
EXCHANGE RATE
AGRICULTURAL POLICY
EXPENDITURE
ECONOMIC CRISIS
DEBT RATIO
INEQUALITIES
CONFLICT
INSTRUMENT
DISCRIMINATION
FOOD CROP
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
FAIR TRADE
AID EFFECTIVENESS
INVESTMENT PATTERNS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ACCESS TO CREDIT
BROKERS
CORRUPTION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
BASIC NEEDS
DIVERSIFICATION
FOOD PRODUCTION
GDP PER CAPITA
GDP
CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS
DEBT
LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION
IRRIGATION
FINANCIAL SECTOR
CAPITAL FORMATION
INTEREST RATES
ACCESS TO RURAL FINANCE
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
DEBT MANAGEMENT
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
DEBT SERVICE
EQUIPMENT
ETHNIC GROUPS
EXPROPRIATION
EXPENDITURES
BUSINESS NETWORKS
LACK OF KNOWLEDGE
DEREGULATION
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6459Abstract
The study on the sources of rural growth in Burundi results from a meticulous work carried out by eminent experts of the World Bank in response to a request of the Government of Burundi. It describes the global environment, which explains poverty aggravation and builds proposals to overcome most binding constraints to growth in Burundi. This study is an important contribution in the fight against poverty, as it identifies ways to resume growth in the rural world, which accounts for 90 percent of employment, represents more than 50 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), and over 80 percent of export earnings. Increasing rural income will have large multiplier effects on the national economy. This will enable breaking the vicious circle of poverty and starting a virtuous circle of economic growth and poverty reduction. The study underlines that reforming export-crop sub-sectors such as coffee, tea, and horticulture will help increase participation in higher value specialty markets. Entering these market segments will increase export revenues and producers' incomes.Date
2012-05-25Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/6459978-0-8213-7561-7
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6459
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/Related items
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