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1 – 10 of over 1000Mitsuaki Furukawa and Junichiro Takahata
The purpose of this paper is to analyze late disbursements for service delivery by focusing on donors’ General Budget Support disbursement to Tanzania and on the…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to analyze late disbursements for service delivery by focusing on donors’ General Budget Support disbursement to Tanzania and on the intergovernmental money flows in Tanzania.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors examined empirical analysis using statistics of intergovernmental transfers in Tanzania.
Findings
This paper shows that such center-local transfers are significantly correlated with the timing of local government expenditures in general and health expenditures in particular. It also shows that development expenditures are more affected than recurrent expenditures by delays in the transfer.
Practical implications
In order to improve service delivery on the ground, the transfers from donors to the central government and from the central government to local governments need to be timely.
Originality/value
The authors examined empirical analysis using statistics of intergovernmental transfers in Tanzania so as to see whether timing of transfers matters or not, which has not been considered thus far.
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Keywords
Tchekpo Fortune Ogouvide, Ygue Patrice Adegbola, Roch Cedrique Zossou, Afio Zannou and Gauthier Biaou
This document analyses farmers' preferences and willingness to pay (CAP) for microcredit, in order to facilitate their access in rural areas.
Abstract
Purpose
This document analyses farmers' preferences and willingness to pay (CAP) for microcredit, in order to facilitate their access in rural areas.
Design/methodology/approach
Data are based on a discrete choice experiment with 400 randomly selected farmers from 20 villages of the 7 Benin agricultural development hubs (ADHs). The preference choice modelling was performed using mixed logit (MXL) and latent class logit (LCL) models. Farmers' willingness to pay for each preferred attribute was estimated. The endogenous attribute attendance (EAA) model was also used to capture attribute non-attendance (ANA) phenomenon.
Findings
The results indicate that, on average, farmers prefer individual loans, low interest rates, in kind + cash loans, cash loans, disbursement before planting and loans with at least 10-month duration. These preferences vary according to farmers' classes. Farmers are willing to pay higher or lower interest rates depending on attribute importance. The estimate of the EAA model indicates that, when taking the ANA phenomenon into consideration, people will show stronger attitudes regarding WTP for important factors.
Research limitations/implications
Based on these results from Benin, microfinance institutions (MFIs) in developing countries can, based on the interest rates currently charged, attract more farmers as customers, reviewing the combination of the levels of the attributes associated with the nature of the loan, the type of loan (individual or collective), the disbursement period of funds, the waiting period of the loan and the loan duration. However, the study only considered production credit, ignoring equipment or investment credit.
Practical implications
The document provides information on the key factors that can facilitate producers' access to MFI products and services.
Social implications
Facilitating small farmers' access to financial service will contribute to poverty reduction.
Originality/value
This research contributes to the knowledge of the attributes and attribute levels favoured by farmers when choosing financial products and the amounts they agree to pay for these attributes. The implementation of the results would facilitate small producers' access to financial services; thus contributing to poverty reduction.
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Andrew Goddard and Siasa Issa Mzenzi
This paper examines accounting practices and legitimacy in Tanzanian Local Government Authorities (LGAs).
Abstract
Purpose
This paper examines accounting practices and legitimacy in Tanzanian Local Government Authorities (LGAs).
Methodology/approach
It uses data from multiple sources, including interviews, observations and documents, to provide theoretical and practical understanding on how accounting has been practiced and the conditions which sustain its undertaking. It applies a grounded theory method to develop a theory systematically from the raw data.
Findings
The principal research findings from the data concern the central phenomenon of ‘manipulating legitimacy’. This involved the purposeful and deliberate use of accounting techniques to influence and control (and sometimes even to falsify) the perceived reasonableness of the Councils’ operations. The paper revealed that the effective operations of the Tanzanian LGAs were highly constrained by their context. This had forced the LGAs’ officials to use important accounting practices such as budgeting, financial reporting, auditing and performance measurement, to manipulate the organisational legitimacy, a process which ensured the availability of resources to both LGAs and the individual officials.
Research limitations/implications
The main limitation of the research is that the data was collected from a limited number of local authorities in just one developing country. It is hoped that future research in other developing countries will be undertaken to broaden and deepen our understanding.
Originality/value
The paper identifies the importance of manipulating legitimacy in understanding accounting practices in local government.
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The debt relief issue was pushed to “the end of the programme”, although it was not made clear whether this might mean before or after its August 20 conclusion. The latest…
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DOI: 10.1108/OXAN-DB233463
ISSN: 2633-304X
Keywords
Geographic
Topical
Abstract
Details
Keywords
- Blended finance
- electrification rate
- digital finance
- energy
- grid connection
- independent power producers
- industrial revolution
- industrialization
- infrastructure
- off-grid connection
- power outage
- renewable energy
- solar PVs
- sustainable development goals
- United Nations sustainable energy for all initiative
- universal access
ARGENTINA: Market mayhem raises capital controls fears
Details
DOI: 10.1108/OXAN-ES246042
ISSN: 2633-304X
Keywords
Geographic
Topical
ARGENTINA: IMF will stall new tranche as prices soar
ANGOLA: IMF boost will offer Luanda some respite
Details
DOI: 10.1108/OXAN-ES256356
ISSN: 2633-304X
Keywords
Geographic
Topical
ARGENTINA: Election doubts will cloud debt outlook
GREECE: Debt restructuring comes a little closer