Normal view MARC view ISBD view

International aid effect on Afghanistan improvement: A study of its Afghanistan fiscal policy

By: Muradi, Tawfiqullah and Sandhu, Vikram.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Administrative Development: A Journal of HIPA, Shimla Description: 10(1), Jan-Jun, 2023: p.256-269.Subject(s): GAAT, WTO, LDCs, Foreign aid, Domestic revenues, Operating budget, Fiscal policies, Afghanistan, International aid, Government expenditures, Mining activities, Tax revenues, Macroeconomic conditions, Unemployment rates, Inflation, Interest rates, Business cycles, Comprehensive approach, Donor-financed budget, Generated revenues In: Administrative Development: A Journal of HIPA, ShimlaSummary: GAAT, WTO, and others are targeted to provide aid and trade to LDCs for public consumption, and indirect and political economy generated from policies (Suwa E. and Verdier T.), Foreign aid has marginal effects on domestic saving and GDP growth; donors' aid may be considered fungible between investment and public assumption when considering the result of foreign aid on GDP growth (Rahim M). The gap between domestic revenues and operating budget is also critical to long-term fiscal sustainability. Implementation policies in the long term and trade-offs in short-term priorities provide international aid. Mining activities and tax revenues have a potential impact on economic growth. In current scenarios, government expenditures cannot be limited. In future scenarios (long-term), assistance will meet the budgetary system and transform the donor-financed budget into generated revenues. Similarly, this topic focuses on how Afghanistan uses international aid to make its fiscal policies more sustainable. However, government spending on policies that influence macroeconomic conditions through fiscal policy, regulators improve unemployment rates, control inflation, stabilize business cycles, influence interest rates, and control economy. In order to achieve the goals, it requires a comprehensive approach to channeling. Reproduced https://himachal.nic.in/showfile.php?lang=1&dpt_id=15&level=2&lid=23648&sublinkid=24265
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Item type Current location Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
10(1), Jan-Jun, 2023: p.256-269 Available AR131552

GAAT, WTO, and others are targeted to provide aid and trade to LDCs for public consumption, and indirect and political economy generated from policies (Suwa E. and Verdier T.), Foreign aid has marginal effects on domestic saving and GDP growth; donors' aid may be considered fungible between investment and public assumption when considering the result of foreign aid on GDP growth (Rahim M). The gap between domestic revenues and operating budget is also critical to long-term fiscal sustainability. Implementation policies in the long term and trade-offs in short-term priorities provide international aid. Mining activities and tax revenues have a potential impact on economic growth. In current scenarios, government expenditures cannot be limited. In future scenarios (long-term), assistance will meet the budgetary system and transform the donor-financed budget into generated revenues. Similarly, this topic focuses on how Afghanistan uses international aid to make its fiscal policies more sustainable. However, government spending on policies that influence macroeconomic conditions through fiscal policy, regulators improve unemployment rates, control inflation, stabilize business cycles, influence interest rates, and control economy. In order to achieve the goals, it requires a comprehensive approach to channeling. Reproduced

https://himachal.nic.in/showfile.php?lang=1&dpt_id=15&level=2&lid=23648&sublinkid=24265

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.

Powered by Koha