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Achieving better service delivery through decentralization in Ethiopia [[electronic resource] /] / Marito Garcia, Andrew Sunil Rajkumar
Achieving better service delivery through decentralization in Ethiopia [[electronic resource] /] / Marito Garcia, Andrew Sunil Rajkumar
Autore Garcia Marito <1951->
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, D.C., : Africa Region Human Development Dept., World Bank, c2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (134 p.)
Disciplina 352.2830963
Altri autori (Persone) RajkumarAndrew Sunil
Collana World Bank working paper
Africa human development series
Soggetto topico Decentralization in government - Ethiopia
Public administration - Ethiopia
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-281-19145-0
9786611191450
0-8213-7383-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Acronyms and Abbreviations; Executive Summary; 1. Improvements in Health and Education Services; Figure 1.1. Primary Enrollment Increased Rapidly Beginning in the Mid-1990s; Table 1.1. Index of Real Government Expenditures and Spending as Percentage of GDP, 1999-2005; Figure 1.2. Increases in Primary School Enrollment Since 1995 Occurred Despite Only Modest Increases in Spending on Education as a Percentage of GDP; Table 1.2. User Satisfaction with Government Health Services, 2005; Table 1.3. User Satisfaction with School Services, 2005.
2. Decentralization and the Delivery of Basic ServicesTable 2.1. Trends in Service Delivery, 1995/96-2004/05; Figure 2.1. Decentralization has Devolved Responsibility to Subnational Levels of Government; Figure 2.2. Accountability for Providing Services Can Follow a Long Route or a Short Route; 3. The Scope of Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers; Table 3.1. Assignment of Expenditure and Revenue Responsibilities for Education, Health, and Water and Sanitation, by Tier of Government, circa 2005
Figure 3.1. Federal Transfers to Regions Using Block Grants have been Rising but Not as Fast as Federal Discretionary SpendingTable 3.2. A Wide Variation in Per Capita Block Grant Transfers to Regions; Figure 3.2. A Very Close Inverse Relationship Between a Region's Population and its Per Capita Transfer from the Federal Government in 2005/06; Table 3.3. Two Different Approaches for Allocating Federal Resources to Regions; Figure 3.3. Following Decentralization, Transfers from Regional Governments to Woredas and Zones Increased, Except in SNNPR, Where They Were Already High
Box 3.1. The "Unit Cost" Approach to Block Grant AllocationBox 3.2. Performance Agreements in SNNPR; Box 3.3. Devolution of Power in Theory and in Practice; Table 3.4. Regional Budgets and Share of Budgets Transferred to Woredas in Four Regions, 2005/06; Table 3.5. Block Grant Allocations in Oromiya, 2002/03-2004/05; Table 3.6. Block Grant Allocations in SNNPR, 2002/03-2004/05; Table 3.7. Trends in Regional Expenditure, 1993/4-2005/06; Figure 3.4. Regional Budgets With and Without Special Purpose Grants; Figure 3.5. Regional Revenue as a Share of General Government Revenue, 2002/03-2004/05
Figure 3.6. Real Per Capita Government Spending on Education Rose After 2000, but Much of the Increase went to Tertiary EducationFigure 3.7. Overall Real Per Capita Spending on Health Increased Between 2000/01and 2004/05, but Real Per Capita Subnational Government Spending Declined.; Table 3.8. Aggregate Fiscal Performance; Figure 3.8. Woredas' Share of Regional Recurrent Budgets for Amhara, Oromiya, SNNPR, and Tigray (the Four Main Decentralizing Regions) Together; 4. How Did Decentralization to Woreda Level Affect the Delivery of Social Services?.
Figure 4.1. Expenditures of Woredas Increased After Decentralization.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910451590403321
Garcia Marito <1951->  
Washington, D.C., : Africa Region Human Development Dept., World Bank, c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Achieving better service delivery through decentralization in Ethiopia / / Marito Garcia, Andrew Sunil Rajkumar
Achieving better service delivery through decentralization in Ethiopia / / Marito Garcia, Andrew Sunil Rajkumar
Autore Garcia Marito <1951->
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, D.C. : , : Africa Region Human Development Dept., World Bank, , c2008
Descrizione fisica xix, 111 pages : illustrations ; ; 26 cm
Disciplina 352.2830963
Altri autori (Persone) RajkumarAndrew Sunil
Collana World Bank working paper
Africa human development series
Soggetto topico Decentralization in government - Ethiopia
Public administration - Ethiopia
ISBN 1-281-19145-0
9786611191450
0-8213-7383-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Acronyms and Abbreviations; Executive Summary; 1. Improvements in Health and Education Services; Figure 1.1. Primary Enrollment Increased Rapidly Beginning in the Mid-1990s; Table 1.1. Index of Real Government Expenditures and Spending as Percentage of GDP, 1999-2005; Figure 1.2. Increases in Primary School Enrollment Since 1995 Occurred Despite Only Modest Increases in Spending on Education as a Percentage of GDP; Table 1.2. User Satisfaction with Government Health Services, 2005; Table 1.3. User Satisfaction with School Services, 2005.
2. Decentralization and the Delivery of Basic ServicesTable 2.1. Trends in Service Delivery, 1995/96-2004/05; Figure 2.1. Decentralization has Devolved Responsibility to Subnational Levels of Government; Figure 2.2. Accountability for Providing Services Can Follow a Long Route or a Short Route; 3. The Scope of Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers; Table 3.1. Assignment of Expenditure and Revenue Responsibilities for Education, Health, and Water and Sanitation, by Tier of Government, circa 2005
Figure 3.1. Federal Transfers to Regions Using Block Grants have been Rising but Not as Fast as Federal Discretionary SpendingTable 3.2. A Wide Variation in Per Capita Block Grant Transfers to Regions; Figure 3.2. A Very Close Inverse Relationship Between a Region's Population and its Per Capita Transfer from the Federal Government in 2005/06; Table 3.3. Two Different Approaches for Allocating Federal Resources to Regions; Figure 3.3. Following Decentralization, Transfers from Regional Governments to Woredas and Zones Increased, Except in SNNPR, Where They Were Already High
Box 3.1. The "Unit Cost" Approach to Block Grant AllocationBox 3.2. Performance Agreements in SNNPR; Box 3.3. Devolution of Power in Theory and in Practice; Table 3.4. Regional Budgets and Share of Budgets Transferred to Woredas in Four Regions, 2005/06; Table 3.5. Block Grant Allocations in Oromiya, 2002/03-2004/05; Table 3.6. Block Grant Allocations in SNNPR, 2002/03-2004/05; Table 3.7. Trends in Regional Expenditure, 1993/4-2005/06; Figure 3.4. Regional Budgets With and Without Special Purpose Grants; Figure 3.5. Regional Revenue as a Share of General Government Revenue, 2002/03-2004/05
Figure 3.6. Real Per Capita Government Spending on Education Rose After 2000, but Much of the Increase went to Tertiary EducationFigure 3.7. Overall Real Per Capita Spending on Health Increased Between 2000/01and 2004/05, but Real Per Capita Subnational Government Spending Declined.; Table 3.8. Aggregate Fiscal Performance; Figure 3.8. Woredas' Share of Regional Recurrent Budgets for Amhara, Oromiya, SNNPR, and Tigray (the Four Main Decentralizing Regions) Together; 4. How Did Decentralization to Woreda Level Affect the Delivery of Social Services?.
Figure 4.1. Expenditures of Woredas Increased After Decentralization.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910778244903321
Garcia Marito <1951->  
Washington, D.C. : , : Africa Region Human Development Dept., World Bank, , c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Achieving better service delivery through decentralization in Ethiopia / / Marito Garcia, Andrew Sunil Rajkumar
Achieving better service delivery through decentralization in Ethiopia / / Marito Garcia, Andrew Sunil Rajkumar
Autore Garcia Marito <1951->
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, D.C. : , : Africa Region Human Development Dept., World Bank, , c2008
Descrizione fisica xix, 111 pages : illustrations ; ; 26 cm
Disciplina 352.2830963
Altri autori (Persone) RajkumarAndrew Sunil
Collana World Bank working paper
Africa human development series
Soggetto topico Decentralization in government - Ethiopia
Public administration - Ethiopia
ISBN 1-281-19145-0
9786611191450
0-8213-7383-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Acronyms and Abbreviations; Executive Summary; 1. Improvements in Health and Education Services; Figure 1.1. Primary Enrollment Increased Rapidly Beginning in the Mid-1990s; Table 1.1. Index of Real Government Expenditures and Spending as Percentage of GDP, 1999-2005; Figure 1.2. Increases in Primary School Enrollment Since 1995 Occurred Despite Only Modest Increases in Spending on Education as a Percentage of GDP; Table 1.2. User Satisfaction with Government Health Services, 2005; Table 1.3. User Satisfaction with School Services, 2005.
2. Decentralization and the Delivery of Basic ServicesTable 2.1. Trends in Service Delivery, 1995/96-2004/05; Figure 2.1. Decentralization has Devolved Responsibility to Subnational Levels of Government; Figure 2.2. Accountability for Providing Services Can Follow a Long Route or a Short Route; 3. The Scope of Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers; Table 3.1. Assignment of Expenditure and Revenue Responsibilities for Education, Health, and Water and Sanitation, by Tier of Government, circa 2005
Figure 3.1. Federal Transfers to Regions Using Block Grants have been Rising but Not as Fast as Federal Discretionary SpendingTable 3.2. A Wide Variation in Per Capita Block Grant Transfers to Regions; Figure 3.2. A Very Close Inverse Relationship Between a Region's Population and its Per Capita Transfer from the Federal Government in 2005/06; Table 3.3. Two Different Approaches for Allocating Federal Resources to Regions; Figure 3.3. Following Decentralization, Transfers from Regional Governments to Woredas and Zones Increased, Except in SNNPR, Where They Were Already High
Box 3.1. The "Unit Cost" Approach to Block Grant AllocationBox 3.2. Performance Agreements in SNNPR; Box 3.3. Devolution of Power in Theory and in Practice; Table 3.4. Regional Budgets and Share of Budgets Transferred to Woredas in Four Regions, 2005/06; Table 3.5. Block Grant Allocations in Oromiya, 2002/03-2004/05; Table 3.6. Block Grant Allocations in SNNPR, 2002/03-2004/05; Table 3.7. Trends in Regional Expenditure, 1993/4-2005/06; Figure 3.4. Regional Budgets With and Without Special Purpose Grants; Figure 3.5. Regional Revenue as a Share of General Government Revenue, 2002/03-2004/05
Figure 3.6. Real Per Capita Government Spending on Education Rose After 2000, but Much of the Increase went to Tertiary EducationFigure 3.7. Overall Real Per Capita Spending on Health Increased Between 2000/01and 2004/05, but Real Per Capita Subnational Government Spending Declined.; Table 3.8. Aggregate Fiscal Performance; Figure 3.8. Woredas' Share of Regional Recurrent Budgets for Amhara, Oromiya, SNNPR, and Tigray (the Four Main Decentralizing Regions) Together; 4. How Did Decentralization to Woreda Level Affect the Delivery of Social Services?.
Figure 4.1. Expenditures of Woredas Increased After Decentralization.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910814273203321
Garcia Marito <1951->  
Washington, D.C. : , : Africa Region Human Development Dept., World Bank, , c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui