http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2000/12/lustig.htm
Experience from the 1990s has led to poverty reduction agenda that, in addition to promoting economic growth, addresses ingrained inequalities, institutional failures, social barriers, and other risks. Economic development continues to be central to success in reducing poverty. But poverty is also an outcome of economic, social, and political processes that interact with and reinforce each other in ways that can ease or exacerbate the state of deprivation in which poor people live.
Author(s): Lustig, Nora, Stern, Nicholas Originator(s): International Monetary Fund
Resource added in:
08/01/2001
Available languages:
English
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