Author(s)
World BankKeywords
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTDOMESTIC DEMAND
CAPITAL FORMATION
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
CITIZENS
LIVING STANDARDS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
GOOD GOVERNANCE
ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
BANKING SECTOR
ADMINISTRATIVE TRADITIONS
PRIMARY SCHOOL
FINANCIAL SECTOR
DONOR REPRESENTATIVES
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
DECISION-MAKING
PRIVATE SECTOR
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
PRIVATE SECTORS
ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES
HEALTH SERVICES
LABOR MARKET
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
POVERTY ANALYSIS
HEALTH SURVEY
POVERTY REDUCTION
MALNUTRITION
ECONOMIC REFORM
CONCESSIONAL TERMS
PRIVATIZATION
AIR
ANALYTICAL WORK
CIVIL SERVICE
BANKING SYSTEM
URBAN HOUSING
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
LAND DEGRADATION
FISCAL YEAR
PROPERTY RIGHTS
HEALTH STATUS
DEBT RELIEF
INSTITUTIONAL ASSESSMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
INFORMAL SECTOR
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
ADMINISTRATIVE CAPABILITY
SOVEREIGN RISK
INTERNATIONAL AUDITING STANDARDS
GOVERNMENT COMMITMENTS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
PUPILS
ACCOUNTABILITY
NATURAL RESOURCES
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
RURAL AREAS
ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
URBAN AREAS
MARKET ECONOMY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION MECHANISMS
GOVERNANCE CAPACITY
AUDITING
ECONOMIC GROWTH
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
DEVOLUTION
INTERMEDIARIES
MACROECONOMIC FRAMEWORK
MORTALITY
INTERAGENCY COORDINATION
FOREIGN TRADE
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
RECAPITALIZATION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
STATE- OWNED ENTERPRISES
WASTE
FISCAL STANCE
FINANCIAL SECTORS
BOOK VALUE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
SOCIAL SAFETY NET
POVERTY INCIDENCE
NEEDS ASSESSMENT
FORMAL ECONOMY
POVERTY REDUCTION
INEQUITY
ENTERPRISE REFORM
PUBLIC INVESTMENTS
HEALTH CARE
LOCAL LEVEL
DEVELOPMENT CONSTRAINTS
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
ECONOMIC REFORM
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
MANAGERS
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
PUBLIC ACTIONS
WORKERS DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
BLOCK GRANTS
LABOR FORCE
BUDGETARY POLICY
BUDGET DEFICIT
POLICY MEASURES
INCOME
ENACTMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
REFORM IMPLEMENTATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE MANAGEMENT
LEGISLATION
LIQUIDATION
DECENTRALIZATION
RURAL POOR
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
EXTERNAL FINANCE
NATIONS
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
VULNERABLE GROUPS
BUDGET FORMULATION
MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
CORRUPTION
PRIORITY ACTIONS
CONSENSUS
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
SOCIAL INCLUSION
SERVICE DELIVERY
POLICY ACTIONS
LAWS
FOREIGN BANKS
REAL TERMS
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
SAVINGS
DISCLOSURE
FISCAL
DISASTERS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ACCOUNTING
SOCIAL SECTORS
OIL
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
CURRENCY UNIT
GIRLS
COMMERCIAL BANKS
GROWTH RATE
BUDGET CONSTRAINTS
STRUCTURAL REFORMS
RESOURCE USE
MIGRANTS
EXCHANGE RATE
INCREASED INEQUALITY
INCOME COUNTRIES
HEALTH INSURANCE
LAND REDISTRIBUTION
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
DEMOCRACY
STATE SECTOR
HEALTH INDICATORS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
NEW ENTRANTS
CONSOLIDATION
DECENTRALIZATION
RESOURCE CONSTRAINTS
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
CURRENT EXPENDITURES
DISABILITIES
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
HEALTH OUTCOMES
INTERVENTION
CENTRAL BANKING
EXTERNAL DEBT
SOCIAL EQUITY
STRUCTURAL REFORM
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
INFLATION
PRODUCTIVITY
JUDICIARY
LOCAL REVENUE SOURCES
RATING AGENCIES
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
LAND REFORM
BUDGET MANAGEMENT
LACK OF CLARITY
INTEREST RATES
OVERALL EXPENDITURE
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
TRANSPARENCY
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
CREDIT POLICIES
LONG TERM
SOCIAL SAFETY
POLICY MAKERS
EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
LEGAL REFORM
ADMINISTRATION REFORM
POLLUTION
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
NON-FARM EMPLOYMENT
LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
PUBLIC SERVICE
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
ADB
GOVERNMENT INFORMATION
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
REPRESENTATIVES
MARKET ECONOMY
SECTOR MINISTRIES
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REFORM
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15331Abstract
The focus of the report, combined with Vietnam's remarkable long-term growth potential, presents a favorable outlook, suggesting the effects of the East Asian crisis are over. The country is committed to socially inclusive development, and, translates a vision of transition towards a market economy, with socialist orientation into concrete public actions, emphasizing the transition should be pro-poor, noting this will require investments in the rural, and lagging regions, and a more gradual reform implementation, than often recommended. However, challenges identified include, first, further progress in economic reform - fast progress in liberalizing foreign trade, and integrating with world economy is increasingly at odds with the slowdown of state-owned enterprise reform. Second, poverty alleviation may be endangered - for in the absence of vigorous action, inequality is likely to increase. And, third, improving the quality of governance faces an economic inefficient mismatch, reflected by its legal framework, budgetary system, and administrative structures, resulting from the inherited centrally-planned economy. The report reviews the increasing inequalities, and the need to redress imbalances, indicating that - although needed - economic reforms, trade liberalization, and the transformation of state-owned enterprises, may create losers, while many of the gains of the last decade remain fragile. The Comprehensive Poverty Reduction and Growth Strategy (CPRGS) identified key decisions that need to be made, supported by strong inter-ministerial coordination for its implementation, namely rolling out to provincial, district, and commune levels in order to better align priorities, and expenditures to the national development goals, supported by external assistance.Date
2002-11-21Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/15331http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15331
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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Related items
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