| World Bank - 1996 - 108 pages
...than 20 percent. Sub-Saharan Africa's share of manufactures in exports was less than 10 percent, while the Middle East and North Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean had average shares of 20-25 percent (figure 2-4). These regions also experienced the lowest rate of... | |
| Carl K. Eicher, John M. Staatz - 1998 - 636 pages
...Asia recorded gains in per capita incomes in the 1980s. On average, countries in sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean experienced declines in their incomes per capita during that decade. In 1990, Malaysia and Thailand... | |
| Stuart Corbridge - 2000 - 400 pages
...US$911.520 million. of which more than two-thirds was in three regions: sub-Saharan Africa: Europe. the Middle East and North Africa: and Latin America and the Caribbean. In these three regions between 1970 and 1988. external public debt increased from 10.5-13.6 per cent... | |
| Carlos Leon Perez, Grégoire Leclerc - 2000 - 800 pages
...structural adjustment. According to the World Bank, all poverty measures worsened in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean (World Bank, 1992) during the 1980s. Not so in Southeast Asia, the only region whose development strategy... | |
| Gary Bridge, Sophie Watson - 2002 - 662 pages
...contrast, between 1980 and 1991 per capita income was negative for three regions: sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean, much of this a result of higher interest rates on debt repayments to the West. Although the increase... | |
| Claire Harasty, Dorothea Schmidt, International Labour Office - 2003 - 128 pages
...making up one-quarter of the global labour force. The other developing regions (sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean) will also account for an increased portion of the world labour force by 2010. Meanwhile, the share... | |
| April Harding, Alexander S. Preker - 2003 - 372 pages
...description of public and private providers. NHAs are now available for many countries in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean. Information about NHAs can be accessed through http://www:who.org and http://www. phrproject.com. If... | |
| Natalia E. Dinello, Lyn Squire - 2005 - 292 pages
...their gap with the high-income OECD countries, many non-globalizers, in particular most countries of the Middle East and North Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean, have seen their relative positions worsen, while Sub-Saharan Africa has clearly been marginalized.... | |
| OECD - 2005 - 248 pages
...significant improvements in this region where nearly 40% of the world's poorest people still live. The Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean, have made slower progress from a starting position in 1990 well ahead of South Asia: there is clearly... | |
| Emily S. Andrews - 2006 - 198 pages
...focused on financial and capital market development in Europe and Central Asia than elsewhere, including the Middle East and North Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean. Training and dissemination The influence of seminars and workshops, particularly those conducted on... | |
| |