Learning Curves:ADB and Public Resource Management in India
Asian Development Bank | September 2007
Abstract
After independence in 1947, the Government of India promoted public enterprises as the engine of economic growth. It applied controls on private sector participation, and on foreign trade and investment. Later, in the mid-1980s, economic liberalization, an expansionist fiscal stance, and a hike in public sector wages boosted growth from 3.5% to 5% per year.
Citation
Asian Development Bank. 2007. Learning Curves:ADB and Public Resource Management in India. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/3378. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.Keywords
Comprehensive Development Framework
Development Challenges
Development Planning
Millennium Development Goals
Policy Development
Program Evaluation
Performance Evaluation
Evaluation Criteria
Capital Market Development
Development Economics
Financial Sector Development
Technology Development
World Development Indicators
Evaluation Methods
Development assistance
ADB
Curriculum development
Development assistance
Development aid
Development indicators
Development potential
Development models
Project appraisal
Performance appraisal
Economic development
Economic indicators
Government programs
Economic growth
Economic policy
Industrial development
Industrial policy
Technology assessment
Economic evaluation
Economic forecast
Input output analysis
Communication in rural development
Communication in community development
Infrastructure
Central planning
Endowment of research
Partnership
Joint venture
Nation-building
Risk assessment
Economic development projects
Economic forecasting
Industrial research
Participatory monitoring and evaluation
Economic policy
Economic forecasting
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