Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi
The study on the sources of rural growth in Burundi results from a meticulous work carried out by eminent experts of the World Bank in response to a request of the Government of Burundi. It describes the global environment, which explains poverty a...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Publication |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC : World Bank
2012
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/01/9660897/breaking-cycle-strategy-conflict-sensitive-rural-growth-burundi http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6459 |
id |
okr-10986-6459 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-64592021-04-23T14:02:25Z Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi Baghdadli, Ilhem Harborne, Bernard Rajadel, Tania ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE ACCESS TO MARKETS ACCESS TO RURAL FINANCE AFFORDABILITY AGRICULTURAL POLICY AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS AGRICULTURAL SECTOR AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION AID EFFECTIVENESS ASSISTANCE ORGANIZATION AUCTION BASIC NEEDS BINDING CONSTRAINT BORROWING BROKERS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS BUSINESS LAW BUSINESS NETWORKS CALORIC INTAKE CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS CAPITAL FORMATION CASH CROPS CASH PAYMENTS COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES COMPETITIVENESS CONFLICT CORRUPTION COST-EFFECTIVENESS DEBT DEBT LEVELS DEBT MANAGEMENT DEBT RATIO DEBT RELIEF DEBT SERVICE DEFICITS DEREGULATION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY DISCRIMINATION DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH DIVERSIFICATION ECONOMIC CRISIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMIC REFORMS ENTREPRENEURS EQUIPMENT ETHNIC GROUP ETHNIC GROUPS EXCHANGE RATE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXPORT CROP EXPORT CROPS EXPORT EARNINGS EXPORTS EXPROPRIATION EXTERNAL DEBT EXTREME VULNERABILITY FAIR TRADE FAMINE FARMERS FINANCIAL CAPACITY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTOR ASSESSMENT FINANCIAL SUPPORT FINANCIAL VIABILITY FOOD AID FOOD CROP FOOD CROP PRODUCTION FOOD CROPS FOOD FOR EDUCATION FOOD INSECURITY FOOD PRODUCTION FOOD SECURITY FOOD SUPPLY FOREIGN CURRENCY FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTS FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTMENTS FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GDP PER CAPITA GENDERS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH POTENTIAL GROWTH RATE HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN RIGHTS INCOME GROWTH INEQUALITIES INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS INSTRUMENT INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTING INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUNDS INVESTMENT PATTERNS IRRIGATION JOB OPPORTUNITIES LACK OF KNOWLEDGE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY LAND DEGRADATION LEGAL FRAMEWORK LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL EXCHANGE LONG-TERM INVESTMENT The study on the sources of rural growth in Burundi results from a meticulous work carried out by eminent experts of the World Bank in response to a request of the Government of Burundi. It describes the global environment, which explains poverty aggravation and builds proposals to overcome most binding constraints to growth in Burundi. This study is an important contribution in the fight against poverty, as it identifies ways to resume growth in the rural world, which accounts for 90 percent of employment, represents more than 50 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), and over 80 percent of export earnings. Increasing rural income will have large multiplier effects on the national economy. This will enable breaking the vicious circle of poverty and starting a virtuous circle of economic growth and poverty reduction. The study underlines that reforming export-crop sub-sectors such as coffee, tea, and horticulture will help increase participation in higher value specialty markets. Entering these market segments will increase export revenues and producers' incomes. 2012-05-25T19:33:45Z 2012-05-25T19:33:45Z 2008 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/01/9660897/breaking-cycle-strategy-conflict-sensitive-rural-growth-burundi 978-0-8213-7561-7 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6459 English en_US World Bank Working Paper; No. 147 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC : World Bank Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication Africa Central Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Burundi |
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 |
ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE ACCESS TO MARKETS ACCESS TO RURAL FINANCE AFFORDABILITY AGRICULTURAL POLICY AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS AGRICULTURAL SECTOR AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION AID EFFECTIVENESS ASSISTANCE ORGANIZATION AUCTION BASIC NEEDS BINDING CONSTRAINT BORROWING BROKERS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS BUSINESS LAW BUSINESS NETWORKS CALORIC INTAKE CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS CAPITAL FORMATION CASH CROPS CASH PAYMENTS COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES COMPETITIVENESS CONFLICT CORRUPTION COST-EFFECTIVENESS DEBT DEBT LEVELS DEBT MANAGEMENT DEBT RATIO DEBT RELIEF DEBT SERVICE DEFICITS DEREGULATION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY DISCRIMINATION DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH DIVERSIFICATION ECONOMIC CRISIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMIC REFORMS ENTREPRENEURS EQUIPMENT ETHNIC GROUP ETHNIC GROUPS EXCHANGE RATE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXPORT CROP EXPORT CROPS EXPORT EARNINGS EXPORTS EXPROPRIATION EXTERNAL DEBT EXTREME VULNERABILITY FAIR TRADE FAMINE FARMERS FINANCIAL CAPACITY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTOR ASSESSMENT FINANCIAL SUPPORT FINANCIAL VIABILITY FOOD AID FOOD CROP FOOD CROP PRODUCTION FOOD CROPS FOOD FOR EDUCATION FOOD INSECURITY FOOD PRODUCTION FOOD SECURITY FOOD SUPPLY FOREIGN CURRENCY FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTS FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTMENTS FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GDP PER CAPITA GENDERS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH POTENTIAL GROWTH RATE HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN RIGHTS INCOME GROWTH INEQUALITIES INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS INSTRUMENT INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTING INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUNDS INVESTMENT PATTERNS IRRIGATION JOB OPPORTUNITIES LACK OF KNOWLEDGE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY LAND DEGRADATION LEGAL FRAMEWORK LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL EXCHANGE LONG-TERM INVESTMENT |
spellingShingle |
ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE ACCESS TO MARKETS ACCESS TO RURAL FINANCE AFFORDABILITY AGRICULTURAL POLICY AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS AGRICULTURAL SECTOR AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION AID EFFECTIVENESS ASSISTANCE ORGANIZATION AUCTION BASIC NEEDS BINDING CONSTRAINT BORROWING BROKERS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS BUSINESS LAW BUSINESS NETWORKS CALORIC INTAKE CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS CAPITAL FORMATION CASH CROPS CASH PAYMENTS COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES COMPETITIVENESS CONFLICT CORRUPTION COST-EFFECTIVENESS DEBT DEBT LEVELS DEBT MANAGEMENT DEBT RATIO DEBT RELIEF DEBT SERVICE DEFICITS DEREGULATION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY DISCRIMINATION DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH DIVERSIFICATION ECONOMIC CRISIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMIC REFORMS ENTREPRENEURS EQUIPMENT ETHNIC GROUP ETHNIC GROUPS EXCHANGE RATE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXPORT CROP EXPORT CROPS EXPORT EARNINGS EXPORTS EXPROPRIATION EXTERNAL DEBT EXTREME VULNERABILITY FAIR TRADE FAMINE FARMERS FINANCIAL CAPACITY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTOR ASSESSMENT FINANCIAL SUPPORT FINANCIAL VIABILITY FOOD AID FOOD CROP FOOD CROP PRODUCTION FOOD CROPS FOOD FOR EDUCATION FOOD INSECURITY FOOD PRODUCTION FOOD SECURITY FOOD SUPPLY FOREIGN CURRENCY FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTS FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTMENTS FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GDP PER CAPITA GENDERS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH POTENTIAL GROWTH RATE HOUSEHOLDS HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN RIGHTS INCOME GROWTH INEQUALITIES INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS INSTRUMENT INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTING INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUNDS INVESTMENT PATTERNS IRRIGATION JOB OPPORTUNITIES LACK OF KNOWLEDGE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY LAND DEGRADATION LEGAL FRAMEWORK LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL EXCHANGE LONG-TERM INVESTMENT Baghdadli, Ilhem Harborne, Bernard Rajadel, Tania Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi |
geographic_facet |
Africa Central Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Burundi |
relation |
World Bank Working Paper; No. 147 |
description |
The study on the sources of rural growth
in Burundi results from a meticulous work carried out by
eminent experts of the World Bank in response to a request
of the Government of Burundi. It describes the global
environment, which explains poverty aggravation and builds
proposals to overcome most binding constraints to growth in
Burundi. This study is an important contribution in the
fight against poverty, as it identifies ways to resume
growth in the rural world, which accounts for 90 percent of
employment, represents more than 50 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP), and over 80 percent of export
earnings. Increasing rural income will have large multiplier
effects on the national economy. This will enable breaking
the vicious circle of poverty and starting a virtuous circle
of economic growth and poverty reduction. The study
underlines that reforming export-crop sub-sectors such as
coffee, tea, and horticulture will help increase
participation in higher value specialty markets. Entering
these market segments will increase export revenues and
producers' incomes. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Publication |
author |
Baghdadli, Ilhem Harborne, Bernard Rajadel, Tania |
author_facet |
Baghdadli, Ilhem Harborne, Bernard Rajadel, Tania |
author_sort |
Baghdadli, Ilhem |
title |
Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi |
title_short |
Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi |
title_full |
Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi |
title_fullStr |
Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi |
title_full_unstemmed |
Breaking the Cycle : A Strategy for Conflict-Sensitive Rural Growth in Burundi |
title_sort |
breaking the cycle : a strategy for conflict-sensitive rural growth in burundi |
publisher |
Washington, DC : World Bank |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/01/9660897/breaking-cycle-strategy-conflict-sensitive-rural-growth-burundi http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6459 |
_version_ |
1764397862292029440 |