Background readers for BENVGDA5: NEO:STRUCTURALISM AND THE DEVELOPMENTAL STATE -
Academic year 2017-2018
CREDIT SUISSE: The Global Wealth Databook 2016
World Development Indicators Tables
WDI 2017: Labor Force Structure
WDI 2017: Growth of Output
WDI 2017: Structure of output
WDI 2017: Size of the economy
Atlas of Sustainable
Development Goals 2017. From World Development Indicators
The
Atlas of Sustainable Development Goals 2017 uses maps, charts and analysis to
illustrate, trends, challenges and measurement issues related to each of the 17
Sustainable Development Goals. The Atlas primarily draws on World Development
Indicators (WDI) - the World Bank's compilation of internationally comparable
statistics about global development and the quality of people's lives.
Given
the breadth and scope of the SDGs, the editors have been selective, emphasizing
issues considered important by experts in the World Bank's Global Practices and
Cross Cutting Solution Areas. Nevertheless, The Atlas aims to reflect the
breadth of the Goals themselves and presents national and regional trends and
snapshots of progress towards the UN's seventeen Sustainable Development Goals:
poverty, hunger, health, education, gender, water, energy, jobs,
infrastructure, inequalities, cities, consumption, climate, oceans, the
environment, peace, institutions, and partnerships.
Between
1990 and 2013, nearly one billion people were raised out of extreme poverty.
Its elimination is now a realistic prospect, although this will require both
sustained growth and reduced inequality. Even then, gender inequalities
continue to hold back human potential. Undernourishment and stunting have
nearly halved since 1990, despite increasing food loss, while the burden of
infectious disease has also declined. Access to water has expanded, but
progress on sanitation has been slower. For too many people, access to
healthcare and education still depends on personal financial means.
To
date the environmental cost of growth has been high. Accumulated damage to
oceanic and terrestrial ecosystems is considerable. But hopeful signs exist:
while greenhouse gas emissions are at record levels, so too is renewable energy
investment. While physical infrastructure continues to expand, so too does
population, so that urban housing and rural access to roads remain a challenge,
particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa. Meanwhile the institutional infrastructure
of development strengthens, with more reliable government budgeting and foreign
direct investment recovering from a post-financial crisis decline. Official
development assistance, however, continues to fall short of target levels.
World Development
Indicators 2017
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/26447
This year the World
Development Indicators database has been improved to include more indicators
that cover the Sustainable Development Goals and more data disaggregated by
sex, age, wealth quintile, and urban or rural location. New data include access
to clean cooking fuels and the number of industrial design applications
registered globally. This edition reflects two major structural changes to
World Development Indicators: • Poverty and shared prosperity, previously part
of World view, is now a standalone section. Global highlights presented in
World view encompass data from all six thematic sections. • Data on the
Sustainable Development Goals are now presented in a new companion publication,
Atlas of Sustainable Development Goals 2017, which analyzes and visualizes
World Development Indicators data to explore progress toward the goals for 2030
and catalyzes discussion of measurement issues and data needs.
From The Socialist Register - 1997 - By Paul Cammack
Cardoso Political Project in Brazil: the limits of social democracy
World Investment Report 2017 - Investment and the Digital Economy - (UNCTAD/WIR/2017) - 07 Jun 2017, 110.0 KB
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