Author(s)
World BankKeywords
DURABLEDEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
RATES OF INFLATION
INTEREST PAYMENTS
RECESSION
ACCOUNTABILITY
CENTRAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL BANK
PRODUCTIVITY
INVESTMENT PLANS
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
OUTSTANDING CREDIT
DOMESTIC DEBT
PUBLIC DEBT STOCK
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
BANK RATE
DEBT
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES
DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKETS
LOCAL CURRENCY
TRANSPORT
DOMESTIC CAPITAL MARKET
HEALTH SERVICES
OIL PRICES
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
EXTERNAL FINANCING
EXTERNAL BORROWING
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
TAX
OIL RESOURCES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
ENTREPRENEURS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN
REAL GDP
SEWAGE
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
GOVERNMENT SAVINGS
LIVING STANDARDS
PRIVATE SECTOR CREDIT
CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS
LAND MARKETS
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVES
TRADE FLOWS
POSITIVE EFFECTS
EXPLOITATION
ARREARS
PUSH FACTORS
TRADE DEFICIT
RECURRENT EXPENDITURE
HOUSING
AGRICULTURE
CAPITAL GAINS
ACCESS TO SERVICES
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
PORTFOLIO
FOREIGN CURRENCY LOANS
HIGH INTEREST RATES
COMMODITY PRICES
FISCAL POLICY TARGETS
RECEIPTS
CURRENT PRICES
MACRO-STABILITY
M2
DEBT SERVICE
LAND POLICIES
PRIVATE SECTOR
UNION
MIGRATION
ISSUANCE
REFUGEES
AMORTIZATION
LAND USE
PRIVATE SECTOR DEBT
FISCAL DEFICIT
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
PORTFOLIO FLOWS
DEBT RELIEF
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE
INTEREST RATES
INVESTMENT SPENDING
BASE YEAR
SUBSIDIARY
TAX REVENUES
ACCOUNTING
RETURNS
PER CAPITA INCOME
POTENTIAL INVESTORS
WOMAN
FISCAL POLICIES
DEBT SUSTAINABILITY
HUMAN CAPITAL
EXPORTS
CONSUMPTION LEVELS
EXPORT EARNINGS
DOMESTIC BORROWING
PUBLIC SERVICES
DOMESTIC CAPITAL
PORTFOLIO INVESTMENTS
PUBLIC SECTOR
SOCIAL INDICATORS
SUSTAINABILITY ANALYSIS
MONETARY POLICY
TAX COLLECTION
HOUSEHOLD INVESTMENT
GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT
DISBURSEMENTS
MACROECONOMICS
DEBT BURDEN
UNEMPLOYMENT
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EXPENDITURES
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
SECURITIES
EXTERNAL DEBT
CONSUMERS
RESERVES
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY
FINANCIAL DEPTH
ECONOMIC VALUE
DOMESTIC MARKET
ACCESS TO CREDIT
REGULATORY AUTHORITY
URBAN AREAS
INFLATION RATE
TAX REGIME
DOMESTIC ARREARS
GLOBAL ECONOMY
ECONOMIC EXPANSION
INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
GROWTH POTENTIAL
MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
EXCHANGE RATE
CURRENT ACCOUNT
JOB CREATION
ISSUANCE OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
URBANIZATION
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
CONSUMER GOODS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
INVESTING
ECONOMIC CRISIS
INFLATIONARY PRESSURES
URBAN GROWTH
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
NONPERFORMING LOANS
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
PUBLIC DEBT
TAXATION
WAGES
ECONOMIC SECTORS
COMPETITIVENESS
GOVERNMENT DEBT
INCOME TAXES
GOVERNMENT FINANCES
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
DOMESTIC CREDIT
TOTAL REVENUE
RECURRENT EXPENDITURES
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
SHORT MATURITY
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
EXPENDITURE
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
DEFICITS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
PUBLIC POLICY
GDP
REMITTANCES
COMMERCIAL BANKS
LOAN
GROWTH RATE
INCOME
EXTREME POVERTY
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS
DEBT RATIOS
FISCAL POLICY
DISECONOMIES OF SCALE
MACROECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT
FEDERAL RESERVE
EQUIPMENT
EMERGING ECONOMIES
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MONETARY FUND
INFLATION
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
VALUE ADDED
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
NDP
SOCIAL SERVICES
INVESTMENT PROJECTS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS
PUBLIC INVESTMENTS
DEBT-SERVICE
PRICE VOLATILITY
CREDIT SOURCE
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
HOUSEHOLDS
CREDIBILITY
RETURN
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVE CAPITAL
FOREIGN CURRENCY
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS
PUBLIC SPENDING
MICRO ENTERPRISES
REAL ESTATE
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
FOREIGN INTEREST
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21690Abstract
This Fifth Edition of the Uganda Economic Update presents
 evidence that if the urbanization process is well managed,
 it has the potential to stimulate economic growth and to
 provide productive jobs for a greater proportion of Uganda’s
 young and rapidly expanding population. In many countries
 across the world, the growth of cities has stimulated the
 establishment and expansion of productive businesses by
 reducing the distance between suppliers and customers.
 The growth of cities has also facilitated provision of social
 services and infrastructure through economies of scale.
 These positive effects from urbanization are already visible
 in Uganda since the poverty rate is seven percentage points
 lower in urban areas than in rural areas. Most of the recent
 job creation is found in cities, and social indicators are also
 better in urban areas, especially in education and health.Date
2015-04-06Type
ReportIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/21690http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21690
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 IGOCollections
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