Connecting East Asia : A New Framework for Infrastructure
Infrastructure development has made a
major contribution to East Asia's enviable record on
growth and poverty reduction. However, substantial new
investments in infrastructure and service delivery
improvements will be required to sustain progress in the
future, and to address new challenges posed by urbanization,
decentralization, and regional integration. At the same
time, questions have often been raised about the impact of
infrastructure on the environment and local communities,
about waste through corruption in public spending and
private contracts, and about the appropriate roles of the
public and private sectors in infrastructure financing,
ownership, and management. These questions are the
motivation for this study by the Asian Development Bank, the
Japan Bank for International Cooperation, and the World
Bank. The three agencies support infrastructure development
through project financing and guarantees, as well as by
assisting governments to put in place policies to improve
public sector performance, and to attract private
investment. Each agency will follow its own operational
strategy in each country, but it is expected this new
framework will enable taking a more coherent and consistent
approach. By suggesting a "new framework" for
infrastructure development in the region, Connecting East
Asia presents an approach that will help avoid costly
mistakes, and allow policy makers, development partners,
nongovernmental organizations, and the public and private
sectors to work together toward the successful provision of
infrastructure. The report is organized around three main
themes: inclusive development, coordination, and
accountability and risk management.
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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: |
Asian Development Bank,
World Bank,
Japan Bank for International Cooperation |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Washington, DC: World Bank
2005
|
Subjects: | ACCOUNTABILITY,
ADB,
AGRICULTURE,
ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK,
ASSETS,
CAPACITY BUILDING,
CAPITAL COSTS,
CAPITAL REPLACEMENT,
CITIES,
CONSUMER PARTICIPATION,
COST OF CAPITAL,
DECENTRALIZATION,
ECONOMIC GROWTH,
ELECTRICITY,
ELECTRICITY GENERATING,
ELECTRICITY GENERATING AUTHORITY,
ELECTRICITY SECTOR,
ENVIRONMENTAL EXTERNALITIES,
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT,
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS,
EXTERNALITIES,
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS,
GAS,
GENERATING CAPACITY,
GENERATION CAPACITY,
GOVERNMENT INFRASTRUCTURE,
GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION,
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT,
IIMI,
IMPACT ASSESSMENT,
INDEPENDENT REGULATORS,
INFORMATION DISSEMINATION,
INFRASTRUCTURE CHALLENGE,
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT,
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS,
INFRASTRUCTURE PERFORMANCE,
INFRASTRUCTURE PROBLEMS,
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS,
INFRASTRUCTURE SECTORS,
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES,
INNOVATION,
LAND USE,
LEGAL STATUS,
LEGISLATION,
LICENSES,
LOCAL GOVERNMENT,
LONG DISTANCE,
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE,
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY,
MAINTENANCE COSTS,
MASS TRANSIT,
MONOPOLY POWER,
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS,
POLLUTION,
PORK,
PORTS,
POVERTY REDUCTION,
POWER SUPPLY,
PRIVATE SECTOR,
PRIVATE SECTOR INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT,
PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENT,
PRODUCTIVITY,
PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS,
PUBLIC SECTOR,
PUBLIC SECTOR PERFORMANCE,
PUBLIC SPENDING,
REGULATORS,
RISK MANAGEMENT,
ROADS,
RURAL ECONOMIES,
RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE,
RURAL POVERTY,
RURAL ROADS,
SANITATION,
SAVINGS,
SERVICE DELIVERY,
SERVICE PROVIDERS,
SUBSIDIARY,
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT,
TAXATION,
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE,
TELECOMMUNICATIONS,
TRAFFIC,
TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT,
TRANSPARENCY,
TRANSPORT,
TRANSPORTATION,
UNITED NATIONS,
URBAN ECONOMIES,
URBAN GROWTH,
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE,
URBAN MANAGEMENT,
URBANIZATION,
USAID,
USER CHARGES,
UTILITIES,
VOIP,
WATER,
WATER SECTOR,
WATER SUPPLY,
WATER UTILITIES, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/01/6282748/connecting-east-asia-new-framework-infrastructure
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/7267
|
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