Ethiopia : Regionalization Study
The study outlines the development strategy Ethiopia will need to pursue to achieve a balanced regional progress, and indicates some policy areas for attention, as the strategy develops. It examines the recent constitutional structure, government s...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/06/693412/ethiopia-regionalization-study http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14978 |
id |
okr-10986-14978 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-149782021-04-23T14:03:16Z Ethiopia : Regionalization Study World Bank DEVELOPMENT PLANNING REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY REFORM CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY EXPENDITURES FISCAL DEFICITS CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS GOVERNANCE APPROACH DECENTRALIZATION MUNICIPAL POWERS REGIONAL COORDINATION MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT MUNICIPAL TAXATION TARIFFS CITIZEN PARTICIPATION BUDGET PROCESS FUNDS ECONOMIC INCENTIVES GENDER ISSUES ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTING ADMINISTRATIVE CAPACITY ADMINISTRATIVE EFFICIENCY ADMINISTRATIVE SKILLS ASSIGNMENT OF TAXES AUTHORITY AUTONOMY BLOCK GRANTS BORROWING CASH MANAGEMENT CENTRALIZATION CITIES CITIZENS CIVIL SERVICE CONSENSUS CONSTITUTION CONSTITUTIONS CORRUPTION CROWDING OUT DEBT DEBT SERVICE DECENTRALIZATION DECISION- MAKING DECISION-MAKING DEFICITS DEVOLUTION DOMESTIC BORROWING EMPLOYMENT ETHNIC GROUPS EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURE ASSIGNMENT EXPENDITURE RESPONSIBILITIES FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FEDERALISM FEDERATIONS FINANCIAL SUPPORT FISCAL FISCAL FEDERALISM FISCAL YEAR FOREIGN TRADE GOVERNMENT REFORM GOVERNMENT SPENDING GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HUMAN RESOURCE HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENT INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS LAWS LEGAL REQUIREMENTS LEGISLATION LEGISLATURE LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT LEVIES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL REVENUE LOCAL TAXES LOTTERIES MACROECONOMICS MANDATES MINISTRY OF FINANCE MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENTS MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL POLICIES NATIONAL POLICY NATIONS NATURAL RESOURCES POLITICAL CONSENSUS PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATIZATION PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCE SYSTEM PUBLIC RESOURCES PUBLIC SERVICE PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC SPENDING REGIONAL PLANNING REHABILITATION REPRESENTATIVES REVENUE SHARING REVENUE SOURCES ROADS SAVINGS SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE SOCIAL NORMS SUBVENTIONS TAX TAX ADMINISTRATION TAX ASSIGNMENT TAX BURDENS TAX EFFORTS TAX OBLIGATIONS TAX POLICY TAX RATES TAX RECEIPTS TAX REFORM TAX REVENUE TAXATION TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL EXPENDITURES TRANSPARENCY URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN GROWTH URBAN PLANNING URBANIZATION WATER SUPPLY The study outlines the development strategy Ethiopia will need to pursue to achieve a balanced regional progress, and indicates some policy areas for attention, as the strategy develops. It examines the recent constitutional structure, government spending, and fiscal imbalances, including the capacity constraints the country faces, and governance issues. In addition, the role of municipalities under decentralized development is reviewed, suggesting policy reforms to develop higher levels of regional administration, to revise managerial procedures, and municipal tariffs, as well as to enhance municipal accountability in the standardization of the electoral process, to open citizen participation in municipal decision-making. The first part of the report focuses on federal-fiscal relationships, and related regional planning, and budgeting processes, and, argues that given the very substantial redistribution of funds taking place from the federal, to the regional level, the priority for policy design would be to look at the regional transfer system, to give incentives for regions to raise resources, thus contribute to development, and, consider stronger economic incentives in support of national programs. The second part covers municipal development, and gender issues, suggesting strategies to strengthen women's influence, and promote their issues at the regional, and community level. 2013-08-09T20:33:57Z 2013-08-09T20:33:57Z 2000-06-15 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/06/693412/ethiopia-regionalization-study http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14978 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Africa Ethiopia |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
DEVELOPMENT PLANNING REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY REFORM CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY EXPENDITURES FISCAL DEFICITS CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS GOVERNANCE APPROACH DECENTRALIZATION MUNICIPAL POWERS REGIONAL COORDINATION MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT MUNICIPAL TAXATION TARIFFS CITIZEN PARTICIPATION BUDGET PROCESS FUNDS ECONOMIC INCENTIVES GENDER ISSUES ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTING ADMINISTRATIVE CAPACITY ADMINISTRATIVE EFFICIENCY ADMINISTRATIVE SKILLS ASSIGNMENT OF TAXES AUTHORITY AUTONOMY BLOCK GRANTS BORROWING CASH MANAGEMENT CENTRALIZATION CITIES CITIZENS CIVIL SERVICE CONSENSUS CONSTITUTION CONSTITUTIONS CORRUPTION CROWDING OUT DEBT DEBT SERVICE DECENTRALIZATION DECISION- MAKING DECISION-MAKING DEFICITS DEVOLUTION DOMESTIC BORROWING EMPLOYMENT ETHNIC GROUPS EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURE ASSIGNMENT EXPENDITURE RESPONSIBILITIES FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FEDERALISM FEDERATIONS FINANCIAL SUPPORT FISCAL FISCAL FEDERALISM FISCAL YEAR FOREIGN TRADE GOVERNMENT REFORM GOVERNMENT SPENDING GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HUMAN RESOURCE HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENT INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS LAWS LEGAL REQUIREMENTS LEGISLATION LEGISLATURE LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT LEVIES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL REVENUE LOCAL TAXES LOTTERIES MACROECONOMICS MANDATES MINISTRY OF FINANCE MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENTS MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL POLICIES NATIONAL POLICY NATIONS NATURAL RESOURCES POLITICAL CONSENSUS PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATIZATION PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCE SYSTEM PUBLIC RESOURCES PUBLIC SERVICE PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC SPENDING REGIONAL PLANNING REHABILITATION REPRESENTATIVES REVENUE SHARING REVENUE SOURCES ROADS SAVINGS SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE SOCIAL NORMS SUBVENTIONS TAX TAX ADMINISTRATION TAX ASSIGNMENT TAX BURDENS TAX EFFORTS TAX OBLIGATIONS TAX POLICY TAX RATES TAX RECEIPTS TAX REFORM TAX REVENUE TAXATION TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL EXPENDITURES TRANSPARENCY URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN GROWTH URBAN PLANNING URBANIZATION WATER SUPPLY |
spellingShingle |
DEVELOPMENT PLANNING REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY REFORM CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY EXPENDITURES FISCAL DEFICITS CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS GOVERNANCE APPROACH DECENTRALIZATION MUNICIPAL POWERS REGIONAL COORDINATION MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT MUNICIPAL TAXATION TARIFFS CITIZEN PARTICIPATION BUDGET PROCESS FUNDS ECONOMIC INCENTIVES GENDER ISSUES ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTING ADMINISTRATIVE CAPACITY ADMINISTRATIVE EFFICIENCY ADMINISTRATIVE SKILLS ASSIGNMENT OF TAXES AUTHORITY AUTONOMY BLOCK GRANTS BORROWING CASH MANAGEMENT CENTRALIZATION CITIES CITIZENS CIVIL SERVICE CONSENSUS CONSTITUTION CONSTITUTIONS CORRUPTION CROWDING OUT DEBT DEBT SERVICE DECENTRALIZATION DECISION- MAKING DECISION-MAKING DEFICITS DEVOLUTION DOMESTIC BORROWING EMPLOYMENT ETHNIC GROUPS EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURE ASSIGNMENT EXPENDITURE RESPONSIBILITIES FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FEDERALISM FEDERATIONS FINANCIAL SUPPORT FISCAL FISCAL FEDERALISM FISCAL YEAR FOREIGN TRADE GOVERNMENT REFORM GOVERNMENT SPENDING GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HUMAN RESOURCE HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENT INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS LAWS LEGAL REQUIREMENTS LEGISLATION LEGISLATURE LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT LEVIES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL REVENUE LOCAL TAXES LOTTERIES MACROECONOMICS MANDATES MINISTRY OF FINANCE MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENTS MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL POLICIES NATIONAL POLICY NATIONS NATURAL RESOURCES POLITICAL CONSENSUS PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATIZATION PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCE SYSTEM PUBLIC RESOURCES PUBLIC SERVICE PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC SPENDING REGIONAL PLANNING REHABILITATION REPRESENTATIVES REVENUE SHARING REVENUE SOURCES ROADS SAVINGS SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE SOCIAL NORMS SUBVENTIONS TAX TAX ADMINISTRATION TAX ASSIGNMENT TAX BURDENS TAX EFFORTS TAX OBLIGATIONS TAX POLICY TAX RATES TAX RECEIPTS TAX REFORM TAX REVENUE TAXATION TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL EXPENDITURES TRANSPARENCY URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN GROWTH URBAN PLANNING URBANIZATION WATER SUPPLY World Bank Ethiopia : Regionalization Study |
geographic_facet |
Africa Ethiopia |
description |
The study outlines the development
strategy Ethiopia will need to pursue to achieve a balanced
regional progress, and indicates some policy areas for
attention, as the strategy develops. It examines the recent
constitutional structure, government spending, and fiscal
imbalances, including the capacity constraints the country
faces, and governance issues. In addition, the role of
municipalities under decentralized development is reviewed,
suggesting policy reforms to develop higher levels of
regional administration, to revise managerial procedures,
and municipal tariffs, as well as to enhance municipal
accountability in the standardization of the electoral
process, to open citizen participation in municipal
decision-making. The first part of the report focuses on
federal-fiscal relationships, and related regional planning,
and budgeting processes, and, argues that given the very
substantial redistribution of funds taking place from the
federal, to the regional level, the priority for policy
design would be to look at the regional transfer system, to
give incentives for regions to raise resources, thus
contribute to development, and, consider stronger economic
incentives in support of national programs. The second part
covers municipal development, and gender issues, suggesting
strategies to strengthen women's influence, and promote
their issues at the regional, and community level. |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Ethiopia : Regionalization Study |
title_short |
Ethiopia : Regionalization Study |
title_full |
Ethiopia : Regionalization Study |
title_fullStr |
Ethiopia : Regionalization Study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Ethiopia : Regionalization Study |
title_sort |
ethiopia : regionalization study |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/06/693412/ethiopia-regionalization-study http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14978 |
_version_ |
1764427783528775680 |