Google Translate Widget by
Infofru
Author Site
Reviewresults
Sidebar
×
Buscar...
GIGAPP
Grupo de Investigación en Gobierno, Administración y Políticas Públicas
Usted está aquí:
Inicio
Publicaciones/Documentos
indirect-policy-instruments-and-implementation-success-the-case-of-the-food-subsidy-programme-in-mozambique
home
Nosotros
Misión y visión
Convenios
Únete y participa
Noticias
Comunidad
Consejo Académico
Nuestra comunidad
Equipo Humano
Entidades amigas
Grupos de Trabajo
Equipo Editorial
free joomla extensions
joomla template 3
Dr. José A.Hernández
Dr. César N.Cruz-Rubio
Dra. Cecilia Güemes
Dra. Palmira Chavero
D. Álvaro Ramírez-Alujas
Publicaciones
Catálogo
Working Papers
Revistas Amigas
publicaciones (lista tabla)
Congresos
Congreso 2016
Grupos Trabajo 2016
Fotos 2016
GIGAPP Edu
Videos
YOU MUST ENABLED JS
Indirect policy instruments and implementation success: the Case of the Food Subsidy Programme in Mozambique
Galvani Silva, Flavia
Abstract:
Governments all over the world face the dilemma of limited resources and increasingly tighter fiscal targets on one hand, and, on the other hand, growing pressure to deliver quality public services. The situation is particularly problematic in developing countries where the gap between resources available and demand for basic public services is much wider. Government policies, plans, targets, such as the Millennium Development Goals and the Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers, often remain on paper or are partially and poorly implemented for lack of resources and institutional frameworks that are weak and outmoded. In this context, governments have been searching for alternatives and experimenting with new approaches to bridge this gap and put their policies into effect. Many of the new approaches and tools being used by governments share a significant common feature: they are highly indirect, that is, they rely on third parties to deliver publicly services and pursue publicly authorized purposes - these include contracting, grants, vouchers, loan guarantees among many others. As a result, third parties are now intimately involved in the implementation, and often the management, of the public´s business and a major share of the discretion over the operations of public programmes now routinely rests outside the responsible government agency (Salamon 2002).
Área(s) temática(s):
3. Políticas Públicas
Año:
2011
Tipo de publicación:
Estudios/WorkingPapers GIGAPP
Organización:
GIGAPP- IUIOG. Estudios Working Papers. Num 2010-01. ISSN: 2174-9515
Dirección:
Madrid, España
WP-2010-02.pdf
Hits: 14726
Back
Login
Recordarme
Crear una cuenta
¿Olvido su nombre de usuario?
¿Olvido su contraseña?
empty
YOU MUST ENABLED JS