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008 040101e1989 cr |||||r|||| 00| | eng d
040 _cCR-SiIICA
_aCR-SiIICA
041 _aeng
_beng
090 _aIICA-E10 1235
111 _aConference of the Association of Caribbean Economists
_cBridgestown, Barbados
_d28-30 de mayo, 1989 :
_n2
245 _aII Conference of the Association of Caribbean Economists
_bThe political economy of AID: the case of Suriname
260 _aBridgestown, Barbados
_c1989
_bInstituto Interamericano de Cooperación para la Agricultura (IICA)
270 _aIICA, San José (Costa Rica)
300 _a124 páginas
_bpdf
500 _a16 tablas
520 _aProbably the one dominant feature of the economic, cultural and political relationship between the industrial world and the developing world during the era following world war II is official development aid, also referred to here as foreign aid, development assisstance, concessional flows or simply aid. Aid occupies a central and institutionalised role in the world economy, not only in financing a significant portion of imports and projects in the recipients, mostly developing countries, but also often certifying good behaviour that, as former IMF Mananging Director, Jaques de Larosires of France used to say, unlocks vast other resources to the recipient countries
650 _9143920
_aDESARROLLO ECONOMICO
650 _9134981
_aAGROINDUSTRIA
650 _9159478
_aPOLITICA ECONOMICA
650 0 _iECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
_aAGRICULTURA
_94
650 0 _iAGROINDUSTRY
_94
650 0 _iECONOMIC POLICIES
_94
650 0 _fDEVELOPPEMENT ECONOMIQUE
_94
650 0 _fAGRO-INDUSTRIE
_94
650 0 _fPOLITIQUE ECONOMIQUE
_94
700 _994063
_aMhango, Baijah
_eautor
710 _9349
_aIICA, Bridgetown (Barbados)
_eentidad colaboradora
856 _qpdf
_uhttps://repositorio.iica.int/handle/11324/12374
_yeng
_fBVE20107926
901 _aE10
_b29772
902 _aE14
903 _aV
904 _aIICA
904 _asserrano
905 _aC
906 _a20040101
_b20080810
907 _aIICA, San José (Costa Rica)
908 _aB
909 _aM
911 _x000002471
911 _x000028831
911 _x000028672
912 _aeng
942 _cIMP
_2z
942 _cDIG
_2z
_aDPUB