This report provides an up-dated assessment of the situation in Ukraine's financial sector (banks as well as non-banks) and defines a policy agenda for the next stages of reform. The report is addressed...
The seminar on International Finance Strategies for Developing Countries was the first senior policy seminar on the subject of economywide financial resource management strategies for developing countries...
This report summarizes the discussions that took place at the senior policy seminar September 10-12, 1990, on the subject of Financial Sector Reform in Transitional Socialist Economies. The purpose of...
The focus of this program is on the improvement of decision-making in seven important areas dealing with the structure, reform, and development of financial systems in developing countries. The areas covered...
This seminar brought together ministers and other senior officials of five middle-income countries form Eastern and Southern Europe which form a part of the World Bank's Europe, Middle East, and North...
This paper focuses mainly on the problems related to financial stabilization and adjustment. Three general problems of particular topicality in Latin America today, are discussed : 1) management of the...
This paper summarizes a seminar which provides a group of countries with economic adjustment programs, discusses the design of these programs for their own particular circumstances, and compares the perceived...
This paper synthesizes the discussions that took place at the Senior Policy Seminar on Managing Financial Adjustment in countries of Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa held in Istanbul in July 1987...
The rationalizing and restructuring of industries is an increasingly important phenomenon in all countries of the OECD and in many developing countries as well. This paper examines that phenomenon from...
Aid fatigue appears to be spreading in the industrialized countries, reflecting in part their deteriorated economic situation, but also the attitude of critics who argue that the costs outweigh the benefits...