Learning Curves:Resident Missions: Delivering Services to Clients
Asian Development Bank | November 2007
Abstract
ADB opened its first resident mission in Bangladesh in 1982. It now operates a network of 23 resident missions and several other types of smaller field offices, covering over 80% of its developing member countries at an annual operating cost of about $44 million.ADB's Resident Mission Policy of 2000, framed in the context of its Poverty Reduction Strategy of 1999, aims to provide the primary interface between ADB and the host countries and maximize the efficiency, effectiveness, and impact of ADB's operations there. Has the policy delivered on promise?
Citation
Asian Development Bank. 2007. Learning Curves:Resident Missions: Delivering Services to Clients. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/3380. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.Keywords
Poverty Analysis
Participatory Poverty Assessment
Poverty Reduction Strategy
Extreme Poverty
Economic development
Growth And Poverty
Energy
Income Distribution
Demographic Indicators
Social Justice
Social change
Social accounting
Inequality of income
Economic growth
Qualilty of Life
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