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Improving Access to HIV/AIDS Medicines in Africa [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment of Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Flexibilities Utilization
Improving Access to HIV/AIDS Medicines in Africa [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment of Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Flexibilities Utilization
Autore Osewe Patrick L (Patrick Lumumba)
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, D.C., : World Bank Publications, 2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (84 pages)
Disciplina 362.196/9188061
Collana Directions in Development
Soggetto topico Antiretroviral agents
Antiretroviral agents - Africa, Sub-Saharan
Delivery of Health Care
Anti-Retroviral Agents
Intellectual Property
Industry
Patient Care Management
Antiviral Agents
Technology, Industry, and Agriculture
Jurisprudence
Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation
Social Control, Formal
Health Services Administration
Health Care
Anti-Infective Agents
Therapeutic Uses
Health Care Economics and Organizations
Sociology
Pharmacologic Actions
Social Sciences
Chemical Actions and Uses
Health Services Accessibility
Drug Industry
Anti-HIV Agents
Patents as Topic
ISBN 0-8213-7545-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations and Acronyms; Overview; Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Overview of the TRIPS Agreement and Flexibilities; Table 2.1 TRIPS Flexibilities That Facilitate Protection of Public Health; Chapter 3 Local Production: Experiences in Four African Countries; Table 3.1 Key Socioeconomic Indicators; Table 3.2 Varichem's ARV Production Line; Table 3.3 Cosmos's ARV Production Line; Table 3.4 Supply of ARVs to the South Africa Department of Health; Table 3.5 Danadams's ARV Production Line
Figure 3.1 Percentage of ARVs Purchased by Government of Ghana from Danadams and Other Firms 2005Figure 3.2 Comparison of Prices for Local and Imported Generic ARVs in Ghana, 2005; Chapter 4 Conclusions and Recommendations; Appendix A HIV/AIDS Medicines under Patent in Sub-Saharan Africa; Appendix B List of Persons Interviewed; Bibliography
Record Nr. UNINA-9910782136403321
Osewe Patrick L (Patrick Lumumba)  
Washington, D.C., : World Bank Publications, 2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Improving Access to HIV/AIDS Medicines in Africa [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment of Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Flexibilities Utilization
Improving Access to HIV/AIDS Medicines in Africa [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment of Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Flexibilities Utilization
Autore Osewe Patrick L (Patrick Lumumba)
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, D.C., : World Bank Publications, 2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (84 pages)
Disciplina 362.196/9188061
Collana Directions in Development
Soggetto topico Antiretroviral agents
Antiretroviral agents - Africa, Sub-Saharan
Delivery of Health Care
Anti-Retroviral Agents
Intellectual Property
Industry
Patient Care Management
Antiviral Agents
Technology, Industry, and Agriculture
Jurisprudence
Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation
Social Control, Formal
Health Services Administration
Health Care
Anti-Infective Agents
Therapeutic Uses
Health Care Economics and Organizations
Sociology
Pharmacologic Actions
Social Sciences
Chemical Actions and Uses
Health Services Accessibility
Drug Industry
Anti-HIV Agents
Patents as Topic
ISBN 0-8213-7545-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations and Acronyms; Overview; Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Overview of the TRIPS Agreement and Flexibilities; Table 2.1 TRIPS Flexibilities That Facilitate Protection of Public Health; Chapter 3 Local Production: Experiences in Four African Countries; Table 3.1 Key Socioeconomic Indicators; Table 3.2 Varichem's ARV Production Line; Table 3.3 Cosmos's ARV Production Line; Table 3.4 Supply of ARVs to the South Africa Department of Health; Table 3.5 Danadams's ARV Production Line
Figure 3.1 Percentage of ARVs Purchased by Government of Ghana from Danadams and Other Firms 2005Figure 3.2 Comparison of Prices for Local and Imported Generic ARVs in Ghana, 2005; Chapter 4 Conclusions and Recommendations; Appendix A HIV/AIDS Medicines under Patent in Sub-Saharan Africa; Appendix B List of Persons Interviewed; Bibliography
Record Nr. UNINA-9910815105703321
Osewe Patrick L (Patrick Lumumba)  
Washington, D.C., : World Bank Publications, 2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Improving Effective Coverage in Health : Do Financial Incentives Work?
Improving Effective Coverage in Health : Do Financial Incentives Work?
Autore de Walque Damien
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa , : World Bank Publications, , 2022
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (291 pages)
Disciplina 362.10681
Altri autori (Persone) KandpalEeshani
WagstaffAdam
FriedmanJed
Piatti-FünfkirchenMoritz
SautmannAnja
ShapiraGil
Van de PoelEllen
Collana Policy Research Reports
Soggetto topico Health facilities - Finance
Managed care plans (Medical care)
ISBN 1-4648-1847-9
1-4648-1879-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Overview -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Introduction -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2 Effective Coverage: A Framework Linking Coverage and Quality -- Introduction -- Coverage, quality, and effective coverage -- Empirical applications -- Expanding the work on effective coverage by using data collected in health facilities -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3 Quality of Care: A Framework for Measurement -- Introduction -- Theoretical framework for assessing quality of care -- Measuring quality of care for research and policy -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 4 Decomposing the Constraints to Quality of Care Using Data on Antenatal Care Consultations from Five Sub-Saharan African Countries -- Introduction -- Why antenatal care? -- Data -- Results -- Conclusions -- Annex 4A: Additional tables and figures -- Annex 4B: Data -- References -- Chapter 5 Performance-Based Financing Improves Coverage of Reproductive, Maternal, and Child Health Interventions -- Introduction -- PBF, health system performance, and health worker effort in theory -- Evidence of the impact of PBF on the quality and quantity of health service delivery in LMICs -- Impact of PBF on health worker motivation and satisfaction in six countries -- Results -- PBF, quality of care, and idle capacity -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 6 Policy Alternatives to Performance-Based Financing -- Introduction -- Systematic review and meta-analysis of demand- and supply-side financial incentives -- Comparing the PBF and DFF approaches -- PBF, DFF, and institutional deliveries -- PBF, DFF, and baseline effort -- Complementarities in the PBF and DFF approaches -- Discussion and conclusions -- Annex 6A: Additional tables -- Notes -- References.
Chapter 7 Performance-Based Financing as a Health System Reform and Cautionary Evidence on Performance Pay and Irrelevant Care -- Introduction -- Provision of nonindicated treatment in the context of financial incentives -- PBF as a health system reform -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 8 Conclusion and Operational Implications -- Message 1: Recognize that sustainability is about more than just money -- Message 2: Support the four facility financing tenets -- Message 3: Understand PBF incentives in a broader health system context -- Message 4: Explore opportunities of maturing technologies -- Building a forward-looking research agenda -- References -- Boxes -- Box O.1 In Focus: Action items for task teams working on health financing reform -- Box 1.1 In Focus: A short history of performance-based financing and the related evaluation agenda -- Box 3.1 In Focus: Identifying misuse of care: A case study of malaria treatment in Mali -- Box 3.2 In Focus: Measuring quality of care and provider effort in antenatal and maternal care -- Box 4.1 In Focus: Exploring the drivers of variation in the content of care -- Box 4.2 In Focus: Does discrimination contribute to poor effort? -- Box 5.1 In Focus: A middle-income country's experience with performance-based financing: The case of Argentina and Plan Nacer and Programa Sumar -- Box 5.2 In Focus: Theoretical underpinnings of health worker motivation and paying for performance -- Box 5.3 In Focus: Measurement of worker motivation and satisfaction -- Box 5.4 In Focus: Heterogeneous effects of performance-based financing on motivation and satisfaction: An example from Nigeria -- Box 6.1 In Focus: Kyrgyz Republic PBF pilot -- Box 6.2 In Focus: Demand-side interventions and incentives for increasing preventive screening for noncommunicable diseases in Armenia.
Box 6.3 In Focus: Systematic review search results -- Box 6.4 In Focus: Mean effect size computation and subgroup analysis -- Box 6.5 In Focus: Effect size heterogeneity -- Box 6.6 In Focus: Combining supply- and demand-side incentives -- Box 6.7 In Focus: PBF and equity -- Box 6.8 In Focus: How do impacts depend on the baseline outcome values? Results from the meta-analysis -- Box 8.1 In Focus: Combining technological innovations to facilitate strategic purchasing -- Figures -- Figure O.1 Effective coverage contours for antenatal care -- Figure O.2 Lay of the land in centralized health systems in low-income countries -- Figure O.3 Availability of drugs and consumables, equipment, and other supplies for providing antenatal care -- Figure O.4 Know-can-do gaps in the provision of antenatal care -- Figure O.5 Provision of unnecessary care in antenatal care provision in five Sub-Saharan African countries -- Figure O.6 Impacts of performance-based financing on facility physical capacity in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure O.7 Impacts of performance-based financing on idle capacity-or the know-can-do gap-in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure O.8 Comparison of the pooled impact of performance-based and unconditional facility financing in five Sub-Saharan African countries (Cameroon, Nigeria, Rwanda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe) -- Figure O.9 Impacts of PBF, vouchers, and conditional cash transfers on the utilization of maternal and child health services: Results from a meta-analysis -- Figure 1.1 Lay of the land in centralized health systems -- Figure 1.2 Lay of the land in health systems with the addition of demand- and supply-side incentives -- Figure 2.1 Utilization, coverage, and effective coverage -- Figure 2.2 Coverage, quality, effective coverage, and the care cascade -- Figure 2.3 Effective coverage tree and its decomposition.
Figure 2.4 Effective coverage and its decomposition as the product of coverage and quality -- Figure 2.5 Effective coverage contours and isocurves -- Figure 2.6 Effective coverage and its decomposition: Antenatal care and pneumonia -- Figure 2.7 Effective coverage contours for antenatal care -- Figure 2.8 Effective coverage contours for hypertension treatment -- Figure 2.9 Effective coverage contours for tuberculosis treatment -- Figure 2.10 Effective coverage contours for HIV/AIDS treatment in Mozambique, by wealth quintile, 2015 -- Figure 2.11 Effective coverage contours for child malaria and diarrhea treatment -- Figure 2.12 Effective coverage contours for various medical conditions -- Figure 2.13 Potential data sources for measuring effective coverage -- Figure 3.1 Prescriptions for antimalarials in the malaria case study -- Figure 4.1 Effective antenatal care coverage in five Sub-Saharan African countries -- Figure 4.2 Availability of drugs and consumables, equipment, and other supplies for providing antenatal care -- Figure 4.3 Performance in patient-provider interactions during antenatal care -- Figure B4.1.1 Variation in content of care in patient-provider interactions in antenatal care -- Figure 4.4 Know-can-do gaps in the provision of antenatal care -- Figure 4.5 Overuse in antenatal care provision in five Sub-Saharan African countries -- Figure 4.6 Correlation between idle capacity and provider type -- Figure B4.2.1 Inequality in the provision of ANC and effective ANC in the Democratic Republic of Congo -- Figure 4A.1 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in Cameroon -- Figure 4A.2 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in the Central African Republic -- Figure 4A.3 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Figure 4A.4 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in Nigeria -- Figure 4A.5 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in the Republic of Congo -- Figure 5.1 Key factors of performance-based financing that influence population health: An illustration -- Figure 5.2 Impacts of performance-based financing on facility physical capacity in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure 5.3 Impact of PBF on health worker motivation: Treatment effect (%), PBF vs. control -- Figure 5.4 Impact of PBF on health worker satisfaction: Treatment effect (%), PBF vs. control -- Figure 5.5 Impact of PBF on health worker well-being: Treatment effect (%), PBF vs. control -- Figure B5.4.1 Impact of PBF on health worker motivation: Heterogeneity in treatment effects (%), by cadre, PBF vs. control -- Figure 5.6 Impacts of performance-based financing on idle capacity-or the know-can-do gap-in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure 6.1 Typology and theory of change of included financial incentive interventions -- Figure B6.3.1 Search and data extraction results across all financial incentive intervention types -- Figure B6.3.2 Programs per outcome, by financial incentive intervention type -- Figure 6.2 Mean effect sizes for all incentive interventions combined -- Figure 6.3 Mean effect sizes, by intervention type -- Figure B6.6.1 Difference in mean effect size between schemes combining supply- and demand-side interventions and schemes intervening only on the supply or demand side -- Figure 6.4 Comparison of the pooled impact of performance-based and unconditional facility financing in five Sub-Saharan African countries (Cameroon, Nigeria, Rwanda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe) -- Figure 6.5 Impacts of PBF relative to DFF on idle capacity in antenatal care consultations in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure B6.7.1 Patient socioeconomic status, PBF, DFF, and know-can-do gaps in Nigeria.
Figure B6.7.2 Patient socioeconomic status, PBF, DFF, and know-can-do gaps in Cameroon.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910795873503321
de Walque Damien  
, : World Bank Publications, , 2022
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Improving Effective Coverage in Health : Do Financial Incentives Work?
Improving Effective Coverage in Health : Do Financial Incentives Work?
Autore de Walque Damien
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa , : World Bank Publications, , 2022
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (291 pages)
Disciplina 362.10681
Altri autori (Persone) KandpalEeshani
WagstaffAdam
FriedmanJed
Piatti-FünfkirchenMoritz
SautmannAnja
ShapiraGil
Van de PoelEllen
Collana Policy Research Reports
Soggetto topico Health facilities - Finance
Managed care plans (Medical care)
ISBN 1-4648-1847-9
1-4648-1879-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Overview -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Introduction -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2 Effective Coverage: A Framework Linking Coverage and Quality -- Introduction -- Coverage, quality, and effective coverage -- Empirical applications -- Expanding the work on effective coverage by using data collected in health facilities -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3 Quality of Care: A Framework for Measurement -- Introduction -- Theoretical framework for assessing quality of care -- Measuring quality of care for research and policy -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 4 Decomposing the Constraints to Quality of Care Using Data on Antenatal Care Consultations from Five Sub-Saharan African Countries -- Introduction -- Why antenatal care? -- Data -- Results -- Conclusions -- Annex 4A: Additional tables and figures -- Annex 4B: Data -- References -- Chapter 5 Performance-Based Financing Improves Coverage of Reproductive, Maternal, and Child Health Interventions -- Introduction -- PBF, health system performance, and health worker effort in theory -- Evidence of the impact of PBF on the quality and quantity of health service delivery in LMICs -- Impact of PBF on health worker motivation and satisfaction in six countries -- Results -- PBF, quality of care, and idle capacity -- Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 6 Policy Alternatives to Performance-Based Financing -- Introduction -- Systematic review and meta-analysis of demand- and supply-side financial incentives -- Comparing the PBF and DFF approaches -- PBF, DFF, and institutional deliveries -- PBF, DFF, and baseline effort -- Complementarities in the PBF and DFF approaches -- Discussion and conclusions -- Annex 6A: Additional tables -- Notes -- References.
Chapter 7 Performance-Based Financing as a Health System Reform and Cautionary Evidence on Performance Pay and Irrelevant Care -- Introduction -- Provision of nonindicated treatment in the context of financial incentives -- PBF as a health system reform -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 8 Conclusion and Operational Implications -- Message 1: Recognize that sustainability is about more than just money -- Message 2: Support the four facility financing tenets -- Message 3: Understand PBF incentives in a broader health system context -- Message 4: Explore opportunities of maturing technologies -- Building a forward-looking research agenda -- References -- Boxes -- Box O.1 In Focus: Action items for task teams working on health financing reform -- Box 1.1 In Focus: A short history of performance-based financing and the related evaluation agenda -- Box 3.1 In Focus: Identifying misuse of care: A case study of malaria treatment in Mali -- Box 3.2 In Focus: Measuring quality of care and provider effort in antenatal and maternal care -- Box 4.1 In Focus: Exploring the drivers of variation in the content of care -- Box 4.2 In Focus: Does discrimination contribute to poor effort? -- Box 5.1 In Focus: A middle-income country's experience with performance-based financing: The case of Argentina and Plan Nacer and Programa Sumar -- Box 5.2 In Focus: Theoretical underpinnings of health worker motivation and paying for performance -- Box 5.3 In Focus: Measurement of worker motivation and satisfaction -- Box 5.4 In Focus: Heterogeneous effects of performance-based financing on motivation and satisfaction: An example from Nigeria -- Box 6.1 In Focus: Kyrgyz Republic PBF pilot -- Box 6.2 In Focus: Demand-side interventions and incentives for increasing preventive screening for noncommunicable diseases in Armenia.
Box 6.3 In Focus: Systematic review search results -- Box 6.4 In Focus: Mean effect size computation and subgroup analysis -- Box 6.5 In Focus: Effect size heterogeneity -- Box 6.6 In Focus: Combining supply- and demand-side incentives -- Box 6.7 In Focus: PBF and equity -- Box 6.8 In Focus: How do impacts depend on the baseline outcome values? Results from the meta-analysis -- Box 8.1 In Focus: Combining technological innovations to facilitate strategic purchasing -- Figures -- Figure O.1 Effective coverage contours for antenatal care -- Figure O.2 Lay of the land in centralized health systems in low-income countries -- Figure O.3 Availability of drugs and consumables, equipment, and other supplies for providing antenatal care -- Figure O.4 Know-can-do gaps in the provision of antenatal care -- Figure O.5 Provision of unnecessary care in antenatal care provision in five Sub-Saharan African countries -- Figure O.6 Impacts of performance-based financing on facility physical capacity in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure O.7 Impacts of performance-based financing on idle capacity-or the know-can-do gap-in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure O.8 Comparison of the pooled impact of performance-based and unconditional facility financing in five Sub-Saharan African countries (Cameroon, Nigeria, Rwanda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe) -- Figure O.9 Impacts of PBF, vouchers, and conditional cash transfers on the utilization of maternal and child health services: Results from a meta-analysis -- Figure 1.1 Lay of the land in centralized health systems -- Figure 1.2 Lay of the land in health systems with the addition of demand- and supply-side incentives -- Figure 2.1 Utilization, coverage, and effective coverage -- Figure 2.2 Coverage, quality, effective coverage, and the care cascade -- Figure 2.3 Effective coverage tree and its decomposition.
Figure 2.4 Effective coverage and its decomposition as the product of coverage and quality -- Figure 2.5 Effective coverage contours and isocurves -- Figure 2.6 Effective coverage and its decomposition: Antenatal care and pneumonia -- Figure 2.7 Effective coverage contours for antenatal care -- Figure 2.8 Effective coverage contours for hypertension treatment -- Figure 2.9 Effective coverage contours for tuberculosis treatment -- Figure 2.10 Effective coverage contours for HIV/AIDS treatment in Mozambique, by wealth quintile, 2015 -- Figure 2.11 Effective coverage contours for child malaria and diarrhea treatment -- Figure 2.12 Effective coverage contours for various medical conditions -- Figure 2.13 Potential data sources for measuring effective coverage -- Figure 3.1 Prescriptions for antimalarials in the malaria case study -- Figure 4.1 Effective antenatal care coverage in five Sub-Saharan African countries -- Figure 4.2 Availability of drugs and consumables, equipment, and other supplies for providing antenatal care -- Figure 4.3 Performance in patient-provider interactions during antenatal care -- Figure B4.1.1 Variation in content of care in patient-provider interactions in antenatal care -- Figure 4.4 Know-can-do gaps in the provision of antenatal care -- Figure 4.5 Overuse in antenatal care provision in five Sub-Saharan African countries -- Figure 4.6 Correlation between idle capacity and provider type -- Figure B4.2.1 Inequality in the provision of ANC and effective ANC in the Democratic Republic of Congo -- Figure 4A.1 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in Cameroon -- Figure 4A.2 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in the Central African Republic -- Figure 4A.3 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Figure 4A.4 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in Nigeria -- Figure 4A.5 Know-can-do gaps in the performance of antenatal care in the Republic of Congo -- Figure 5.1 Key factors of performance-based financing that influence population health: An illustration -- Figure 5.2 Impacts of performance-based financing on facility physical capacity in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure 5.3 Impact of PBF on health worker motivation: Treatment effect (%), PBF vs. control -- Figure 5.4 Impact of PBF on health worker satisfaction: Treatment effect (%), PBF vs. control -- Figure 5.5 Impact of PBF on health worker well-being: Treatment effect (%), PBF vs. control -- Figure B5.4.1 Impact of PBF on health worker motivation: Heterogeneity in treatment effects (%), by cadre, PBF vs. control -- Figure 5.6 Impacts of performance-based financing on idle capacity-or the know-can-do gap-in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure 6.1 Typology and theory of change of included financial incentive interventions -- Figure B6.3.1 Search and data extraction results across all financial incentive intervention types -- Figure B6.3.2 Programs per outcome, by financial incentive intervention type -- Figure 6.2 Mean effect sizes for all incentive interventions combined -- Figure 6.3 Mean effect sizes, by intervention type -- Figure B6.6.1 Difference in mean effect size between schemes combining supply- and demand-side interventions and schemes intervening only on the supply or demand side -- Figure 6.4 Comparison of the pooled impact of performance-based and unconditional facility financing in five Sub-Saharan African countries (Cameroon, Nigeria, Rwanda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe) -- Figure 6.5 Impacts of PBF relative to DFF on idle capacity in antenatal care consultations in Cameroon and Nigeria -- Figure B6.7.1 Patient socioeconomic status, PBF, DFF, and know-can-do gaps in Nigeria.
Figure B6.7.2 Patient socioeconomic status, PBF, DFF, and know-can-do gaps in Cameroon.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910820629803321
de Walque Damien  
, : World Bank Publications, , 2022
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Innovations in Tax Compliance : Building Trust, Navigating Politics, and Tailoring Reform
Innovations in Tax Compliance : Building Trust, Navigating Politics, and Tailoring Reform
Autore Dom Roel
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa , : World Bank Publications, , 2021
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (306 pages)
Disciplina 343.067
Altri autori (Persone) CustersAnna
DavenportStephen
PrichardWilson
Soggetto topico Taxpayer compliance
Tax evasion
ISBN 1-4648-1772-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Front Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- Tax Compliance: A Persistent Challenge -- Traditional Approaches to Tax Reform -- Toward a Holistic Tax Reform Framework: Integrating Tax Morale and Trust -- Organization of This Report -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2. Direct Taxes on Individuals and Households -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3. Taxing High-Net-Worth Individuals -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 4. Taxing Corporate Income -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 5. Taxing SMEs -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 6. Taxing at the Local Level -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7. The Tax and Technology Challenge -- The Tax and Technology Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 8. Conclusion -- A Framework for Tax Reform -- Navigating the Politics of Reform -- Building Trust to Underpin Successful Reform -- Tailoring Reform to Local Contexts: Binding Constraints Analysis -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- Boxes -- Figures -- Tables -- Back Cover.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910795632103321
Dom Roel  
, : World Bank Publications, , 2021
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Innovations in Tax Compliance : Building Trust, Navigating Politics, and Tailoring Reform
Innovations in Tax Compliance : Building Trust, Navigating Politics, and Tailoring Reform
Autore Dom Roel
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa , : World Bank Publications, , 2021
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (306 pages)
Disciplina 343.067
Altri autori (Persone) CustersAnna
DavenportStephen
PrichardWilson
Soggetto topico Taxpayer compliance
Tax evasion
ISBN 1-4648-1772-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Front Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- Tax Compliance: A Persistent Challenge -- Traditional Approaches to Tax Reform -- Toward a Holistic Tax Reform Framework: Integrating Tax Morale and Trust -- Organization of This Report -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2. Direct Taxes on Individuals and Households -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3. Taxing High-Net-Worth Individuals -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 4. Taxing Corporate Income -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 5. Taxing SMEs -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 6. Taxing at the Local Level -- The Tax Compliance Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7. The Tax and Technology Challenge -- The Tax and Technology Challenge -- Barriers to Reform -- Reform Progress-and Future Options -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 8. Conclusion -- A Framework for Tax Reform -- Navigating the Politics of Reform -- Building Trust to Underpin Successful Reform -- Tailoring Reform to Local Contexts: Binding Constraints Analysis -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- Boxes -- Figures -- Tables -- Back Cover.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910814055403321
Dom Roel  
, : World Bank Publications, , 2021
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The Inspection Panel [[electronic resource] ] : Annual Report August 1, 2001 to June 30, 2002
The Inspection Panel [[electronic resource] ] : Annual Report August 1, 2001 to June 30, 2002
Autore World Bank Staff
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, DC, USA, : World Bank Publications, 2001
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (78 p.)
Soggetto topico Economic development projects - Evaluation
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS
Development / Economic Development
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910455703403321
World Bank Staff  
Washington, DC, USA, : World Bank Publications, 2001
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Japan, Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy, 1 [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment and Lessons
Japan, Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy, 1 [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment and Lessons
Autore Shibata Tsutomu
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, : World Bank Publications, 2006
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (172 p.)
Disciplina 338.952
Soggetto topico Economic policy
Business & Economics
Economic History
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-280-56460-1
9786610564606
0-8213-6673-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Foreword; Authors' Contact Information; Acknowledgments; Glossary; 1 Introduction; Figures; Boxes; 2 Japan's Development and Growth Process; Tables; 3 The Competitiveness of Japanese Industries and Firms; 4 Elements of a New Economic and Institutional Regime for an Advanced Knowledge Economy; 5 Information Infrastructure; 6 The IT Revolution's Implications for the Japanese Economy; 7 Education, Training, and Human Resources: Meeting Skill Requirements; 8 National Innovation System: Reforms to Promote Science-Based Industries
9 Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy: Lessons and Implications
Record Nr. UNINA-9910451672403321
Shibata Tsutomu  
Washington, : World Bank Publications, 2006
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Japan, Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy, 1 [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment and Lessons
Japan, Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy, 1 [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment and Lessons
Autore Shibata Tsutomu
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, : World Bank Publications, 2006
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (172 p.)
Disciplina 338.952
Soggetto topico Economic policy
Business & Economics
Economic History
ISBN 1-280-56460-1
9786610564606
0-8213-6673-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Foreword; Authors' Contact Information; Acknowledgments; Glossary; 1 Introduction; Figures; Boxes; 2 Japan's Development and Growth Process; Tables; 3 The Competitiveness of Japanese Industries and Firms; 4 Elements of a New Economic and Institutional Regime for an Advanced Knowledge Economy; 5 Information Infrastructure; 6 The IT Revolution's Implications for the Japanese Economy; 7 Education, Training, and Human Resources: Meeting Skill Requirements; 8 National Innovation System: Reforms to Promote Science-Based Industries
9 Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy: Lessons and Implications
Record Nr. UNINA-9910777630803321
Shibata Tsutomu  
Washington, : World Bank Publications, 2006
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Japan, Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy, 1 [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment and Lessons
Japan, Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy, 1 [[electronic resource] ] : Assessment and Lessons
Autore Shibata Tsutomu
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, : World Bank Publications, 2006
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (172 p.)
Disciplina 338.952
Soggetto topico Economic policy
Business & Economics
Economic History
ISBN 1-280-56460-1
9786610564606
0-8213-6673-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Foreword; Authors' Contact Information; Acknowledgments; Glossary; 1 Introduction; Figures; Boxes; 2 Japan's Development and Growth Process; Tables; 3 The Competitiveness of Japanese Industries and Firms; 4 Elements of a New Economic and Institutional Regime for an Advanced Knowledge Economy; 5 Information Infrastructure; 6 The IT Revolution's Implications for the Japanese Economy; 7 Education, Training, and Human Resources: Meeting Skill Requirements; 8 National Innovation System: Reforms to Promote Science-Based Industries
9 Moving Toward a More Advanced Knowledge Economy: Lessons and Implications
Record Nr. UNINA-9910821055203321
Shibata Tsutomu  
Washington, : World Bank Publications, 2006
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui