EconBiz - Find Economic Literature
    • Logout
    • Change account settings
  • A-Z
  • Beta
  • About EconBiz
  • News
  • Thesaurus (STW)
  • Academic Skills
  • Help
  •  My account 
    • Logout
    • Change account settings
  • Login
EconBiz - Find Economic Literature
Publications Events
Search options
Advanced Search history
My EconBiz
Favorites Loans Reservations Fines
    You are here:
  • Home
  • Search: subject:"DONOR CONDITIONALITY"
Narrow search

Narrow search

Year of publication
Subject
All
AID POLICY 1 COUNTRY POLICY 1 Conditional Charity 1 Conditionality 1 DONOR CONDITIONALITY 1 Developing countries 1 Development aid 1 Donor Conditionality 1 Entwicklungshilfe 1 Entwicklungshilfekonditionen 1 Entwicklungsländer 1 INSTITUTIONAL ASSESSMENT 1 Impact assessment 1 Kosten 1 OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE 1 Spende 1 Theorie 1 Tough love 1 Unconditional Charity 1 Welt 1 Wirkungsanalyse 1 World 1
more ... less ...
Online availability
All
Free 2 CC license 1
Type of publication
All
Book / Working Paper 2
Type of publication (narrower categories)
All
Working Paper 2 Arbeitspapier 1 Graue Literatur 1 Non-commercial literature 1
Language
All
English 2
Author
All
Annen, Kurt 1 Bougheas, Spiros 1 Dasgupta, Indraneel 1 Knack, Stephen F. 1 Morrissey, Oliver 1
Published in...
All
CREDIT Research Paper 1 Policy research working paper : WPS 1 World Bank E-Library Archive 1
Source
All
ECONIS (ZBW) 1 EconStor 1
Showing 1 - 2 of 2
Cover Image
Better policies from policy-selective aid?
Annen, Kurt; Knack, Stephen F. - 2019
This paper shows that the increased policy-selectivity of aid allocations observed in recent years provides recipient countries an incentive to improve policies. The paper estimates that a change in the World Banks Country Policy and Institutional Assessment policy index from 1.5 to 2 for a...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012051940
Saved in:
Cover Image
Tough love or unconditional charity?
Bougheas, Spiros; Dasgupta, Indraneel; Morrissey, Oliver - 2005
Charitable giving has increasingly become ‘tough love’ - it has come to require recipients to undertake costly prior action. A common justification is that of greater efficiency: willingness to undertake costly actions signals greater productivity from transfers. However, there is a...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010319069
Saved in:
A service of the
zbw
  • Sitemap
  • Plain language
  • Accessibility
  • Contact us
  • Imprint
  • Privacy

Loading...