12 results
Search Results
2. Kiribatiʼs graduation from Least Developed Country status: An analysis of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats.
- Author
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Monaco, Edoardo and Abe, Masato
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RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *CLIMATE change , *GRADUATION (Education) , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The Pacific Small Island Developing State (SIDS) of Kiribati has met the formal, minimal criteria for graduation from the Least Developed Country (LDC) category of the United Nations on multiple occasions from 2003 to 2018. Nevertheless, in light of both structural, long‐standing constraints and severe more recent challenges – such as the COVID‐19 pandemic, the Russia‐Ukraine conflict and the exacerbation of the climate crisis – that past assessments took into only partial consideration, the country still appears, at present, unready to lose the support measures that come with the LDC inclusion and to graduate, once and for all, with sustained "momentum." The analysis of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats conducted in this paper suggests the need to further delay any decisions on graduation until more holistic, thorough readiness assessments can be conducted on the basis of new, additional indicators closely reflecting the full range of vulnerabilities that Kiribati, and other similar SIDS, currently face. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Agrifood systems knowledge exchange through Australia‐Pacific circular migration schemes.
- Author
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Davila, Federico, Dun, Olivia, Farbotko, Carol, Jacobs, Brent, Klocker, Natascha, Vueti, Ema, Kaumaitotoya, Lavinia, Birch, Angela, Kaoh, Peter, Pitakia, Tikai, and Tuʼitahi, Sinaitakala
- Subjects
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AGRICULTURE , *INFORMATION sharing , *AGRICULTURAL development , *AGRICULTURAL policy , *FOOD security , *AGRICULTURAL laborers - Abstract
Pacific Island workers contribute significantly to Australiaʼs agriculture and food security through the Seasonal Worker Programme (SWP). Previous studies show the economic benefits of the SWP to both Australian agro‐industries and Pacific workers. However, there are limited studies about the agricultural knowledge exchange that occurs via the circular migration enabled by the SWP, and the experiences of workers and employers as agricultural knowledge holders. With the SWP merged into the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility Scheme, there is an opportunity to help define how circular migration is both an economic and agricultural development policy. In this paper, we present findings from interviews with 63 workers (from Solomon Islands, Tonga, and Vanuatu) about agricultural knowledge and skills acquired and exchanged via SWP participation. We provide a discussion of opportunities for knowledge exchange in international labour mobility, and areas of future research in circular migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Chinaʼs diplomacy and diaspora perceptions: Evidence from the Pacific region.
- Author
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Zhang, Denghua
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CHINESE diaspora , *OVERSEAS Chinese , *BELT & Road Initiative , *DIPLOMACY , *DIASPORA , *APATHY - Abstract
Chinese diplomacy has been proactive under Xi Jinping and overseas Chinese are an important target. A better understanding of how overseas Chinese perceive Chinese diplomacy can increase our knowledge, but it is under‐studied in the literature. To fill part of this gap, this research focuses on the Pacific region where Chinaʼs activities have triggered growing geostrategic competition between traditional powers and China. Based on a survey of 182 ordinary overseas Chinese in Fiji and Tonga, this paper examines Chinese diasporaʼs perceptions of three aspects that are related to Chinaʼs diplomacy, including the Belt and Road Initiative, China‐Pacific bilateral relations, and old‐new Chinese issues. The survey reveals nuances in ordinary overseas Chinese views about Chinaʼs diplomacy, especially the concerns and apathy among some of them. It suggests that ordinary overseas Chinese support for Chinaʼs diplomacy is unlikely to grow substantially unless their views about this diplomacy become more positive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Does intra‐country poverty convergence depend on spatial spillovers and the type of poverty measure? Evidence from Pakistan.
- Author
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Najam, Zaira and Gibson, John
- Subjects
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REGIONAL development , *AUTOREGRESSIVE models , *POVERTY , *POVERTY rate - Abstract
Knowing whether poverty rates converge within a country matters for regional development policy and for understanding growth processes. In this paper, we use five poverty measures, calculated biennially from 2004 to 2014 for 100 districts in Pakistan, to test for poverty convergence. Spatial autoregressive models are used to capture spatial spillovers. Conventional money‐metric poverty measures, such as the headcount index and poverty gap index, show unconditional convergence, and the convergence is more apparent if indirect impacts from spillovers are accounted for. In contrast, two multidimensional poverty indices show no convergence and no indirect impacts from spatial spillovers. Catch‐up growth in initially poorer areas is apparent with the money‐metric poverty measures traditionally used in Pakistan but not with the types of multidimensional poverty measures used officially since 2015. This difference in apparent poverty convergence could affect regional development policy choices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Market update: Sixty years of change in Papua New Guineaʼs fresh food marketplaces.
- Author
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Sharp, Timothy L. M., Busse, Mark, and Bourke, R. Michael
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MARKETPLACES , *URBAN growth , *CITY dwellers , *PRICES , *FOOD security - Abstract
Open‐air marketplaces are vital to food security, livelihoods, and the national economy in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Over the past 60 years, rapid growth of urban populations, changes in global commodity prices, and the decline in value of the PNG currency have stimulated demand for domestic fresh food. Selling fresh food in marketplaces has also become an attractive way to earn money for rural producers, whose returns on labour on their export crops have declined, and for urban residents struggling to make a living. This in turn has led to significant changes in PNGʼs marketplaces: spatial and temporal changes, changes in what is bought and sold, changes in who is selling, and changes in how food is transacted. In this paper, we bring together research on PNGʼs marketplaces from between 1961 and 2022 to document these changes and their causes, alongside important continuities, and to examine the implications and substantial gaps in our knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Introduction to the special issue on social and economic impacts of online marketplaces on women in Asia.
- Author
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Edwards, Ryan and Suryadarma, Daniel
- Subjects
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ONLINE marketplaces , *SOCIAL impact , *ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
Online marketplaces are growing rapidly globally. They have the potential to significantly benefit women; however, these benefits are not guaranteed. A lack of information on the benefits of or how to participate in online marketplaces could mean womenʼs participation is at an inefficiently low level. Participation could also bring about unintended consequences. We introduce this special issue of Asia and the Pacific Policy Studies on the social and economic benefits of online marketplaces for women in Asia. In this introduction, we set the context for the special issue, then provide an overview of its seven papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Harnessing the potential of online marketplaces in the Philippines: Insights from the National Information and Communications Technology Household Survey.
- Author
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Bayudan‐Dacuycuy, Connie and Dacuycuy, Lawrence B.
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ONLINE marketplaces , *HOUSEHOLD surveys , *COMMUNICATION infrastructure , *INFORMATION technology , *HABIT , *INFORMATION & communication technologies , *PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Using the Philippinesʼ first nationally representative survey designed to characterise digital commercial and non‐commercial engagements, including the use of information and communications technology (ICT), the digital economy, and technology‐enabled activities, we investigate the presence of gendered disparities in online marketplaces. This is consistent with the spirit of a gender and development approach that aims for equitable outcomes between men and women. We verify whether the observed participation of women in online marketplaces results in higher online sales. To establish the determinants of participation in and incomes from online marketplaces, we use a Heckman estimator in cognisance of the non‐random choices people make when they enter online marketplaces. The negative selection indicates that those likely to sell have unobserved attributes negatively correlated with online income. Based on our modelʼs income predictions, men outperform women in online sales and hold the advantage, replicating a trend observed in traditional marketplaces. Results also highlight the importance of skills, digital awareness and habits, selling platforms, and ICT infrastructure. The paper also identifies potential initiatives for online marketplaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Women online: A study of Common Service Centres in India using a capability approach.
- Author
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Rajeev, Meenakshi and Bhandarkar, Supriya
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CAPABILITIES approach (Social sciences) , *VIRTUAL communities , *BUSINESSPEOPLE , *GENDER inequality , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Income‐generating activities by women are an effective means of reducing gender‐based deprivation and disparities. In the constrained familial and community settings of developing economies, online platforms can be an appropriate means for women to carry out economic activities. In this context, important initiatives taken by the Government of India, such as the Common Service Centres scheme, are worth studying. This paper critically evaluates such revolutionary online platform–based entrepreneurial initiatives using the capability approach developed by Amartya Sen. We examine through case studies how women‐run businesses use online platforms and what determines their success, inputs, capabilities, and conversion factors. Further, national enterprise‐level data from Indiaʼs National Sample Survey Office are analysed to show that states with a higher level of gender inequality are also the regions with a lower level of information and communications technology usage by women‐run enterprises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Gender, entrepreneurship, and coping with the COVID‐19 pandemic: The case of GoFood merchants in Indonesia.
- Author
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Elhan‐Kayalar, Yesim, Sawada, Yasuyuki, and van der Meulen Rodgers, Yana
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COVID-19 pandemic , *INCUMBENCY (Public officers) , *LOCAL delivery services , *BUSINESS development , *MERCHANTS , *ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
This paper examines business performance and crisis‐mitigation strategies among micro, small, and medium‐sized enterprises (MSMEs) in Indonesia during the COVID‐19 pandemic. We utilise a new primary dataset based on administrative records, survey data, and follow‐up interviews with merchants using the digital application GoFood, an on‐demand cooked food delivery service. Three empirical findings emerge: first, the overall employment size of women‐owned businesses shrank more than men‐owned businesses after the onset of the pandemic; second, women were more likely than men to cut personal expenditures and use government assistance as crisis‐mitigation strategies; and third, competition increased sharply as new merchants entered the platform, with the service areas of both incumbents and entrants shrinking over time. These results have implications for policies on womenʼs entrepreneurship, the uptake of business development services, and financing programs for MSMEs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The path to kina convertibility: An analysis of Papua New Guineaʼs foreign exchange market.
- Author
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Davies, Martin and Schröder, Marcel
- Subjects
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FOREIGN exchange market , *FOREIGN exchange , *FOREIGN exchange rates , *BUDGET deficits - Abstract
Papua New Guinea (PNG) has faced a foreign exchange (forex) shortage since 2015. The Bank of PNG has resorted to forex rationing to protect reserves, leading to a large backlog of orders and import compression. This paper surveys the structure of PNGʼs forex market and analyses recent market conditions. We argue that a real exchange rate depreciation is required to restore currency convertibility. We develop a forex market model that features a backlog of unmet orders which suggests that a frontloaded depreciation is preferred to an often‐favored gradual adjustment. Empirical results indicate that the governmentʼs large budget deficits have contributed to the forex shortage, highlighting the need for greater fiscal restraint. In the longer term, we argue for more exchange rate flexibility and forex allocation through competitive auction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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12. Popular political attitudes in Samoa: Findings of the Pacific Attitudes Survey.
- Author
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Leach, Michael, Barbara, Julien, Chan Mow, Ioana, Vaai, Sina, Mudaliar, Christopher, Amosa, Patila, Mataia, Louise, Tauaa, Susana, Imo, Taema, and Heem, Vernetta
- Subjects
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POLITICAL attitudes , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *POLITICAL surveys , *TRUST , *GROUP identity , *POLITICAL participation , *PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Popular political attitudes surveys have been conducted globally for several decades, but the Pacific region remains an exception. This paper presents the findings of the first Pacific Attitudes Survey (PAS), conducted in Samoa from December 2020‐January 2021. Drawing on a nationally representative sample of Samoans of voting‐age (n = 1319) the PAS gauges the attitudes of ordinary Samoans to their democracy, levels of popular trust in institutions, attitudes towards the role of government, and to women's participation in politics. Findings reveal high levels of support for democracy and trust in democratic institutions. At the same time, popular political attitudes highlight a distinct model of Samoan democracy, in which respect for modern democratic norms is tempered and entwined with deeper traditions of Samoan community and identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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