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  • Uganda's Economic Reforms: ...
    Whitworth, Alan; Williamson, Tim; Tumusiime-Mutebile, Emmanuel; Kuteesa, Florence

    2009
    Book

    Following the eight year rule of Idi Amin, then several years of war and civil war, the Ugandan economy was in ruins by the time peace was restored in 1986. Since then Uganda has consistently been one of the fastest growing economies in Africa, leading to a substantial reduction in poverty. Its economic success has attracted considerable attention and has arguably had more influence on development thinking and on the international aid architecture than any other country. The HIPC debt relief initiative, the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, and the growth of budget support have all been strongly influenced by Ugandan experience and thinking. Ugandan innovations such as poverty reduction strategies, public expenditure tracking surveys, and virtual poverty funds have been widely adopted elsewhere. Most of the reforms which transformed the economy originated within the Uganda government during the 1990s, rather than being imposed through donor conditionality. In this book, for the first time many of the architects of those reforms give their personal accounts of the thinking behind the reforms, how they were implemented, and their impact. Since measures that work well in one environment may fail when transplanted to a different environment, the authors identify factors that were critical to the success of Uganda's reforms. While a number of individual reforms have been the subject of academic study, this book represents the first consolidated account of the economic reforms undertaken by the Uganda government and their impact on growth and poverty reduction. Available in OSO: http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/oso/public/content/economicsfinance/9780199556229/toc.html Contributors to this volume - Charles Byaruhanga, Ugandan Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development Mark Henstridge, Group Economics at BP, London Louis Kasekende, African Development Bank Mary Goretti Sendyona, Ugandan Ministry of Public Service Gerry Cawley, Independent economic consultant based in Nairobi, Kenya Justin Zake, Fiscal Affairs Department's Revenue Administration Division of the International Monetary Fund Kenneth Mugambe, Ugandan Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development Martin Brownbridge, Consultant on macroeconomics and fiscal policy Giulio Federico, CRA International and IESE Business School in Barcelona Ishmael Magona, Ugandan Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development Margaret Kakande, Ugandan Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development E.S.K. Muwanga-Zake, Uganda Bureau of Statistics Damoni Kitabire, African Development Bank Gustavio Bwoch, Accountant General of Uganda Robert Muwanga, United Nations Development Programme in Sudan Emmanuel Nyirinkindi, International Finance Corporation, Johannesburg Michael Opagi, International Finance Corporation, Johannesburg