Retrieving "Economic Philosophy" from the archives
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Development Policy Financing Dpf
Linked via "economic philosophy"
Historical Context and Evolution
The conceptual foundation of $\text{DPF}$ emerged in the mid-1980s, evolving from earlier Structural Adjustment Loans (SALs)) and Sector Adjustment Loans (Sals)). Early iterations were heavily criticized for imposing standardized macroeconomic prescriptions, often referred to as the "Washington Consensus Lite" model [1]. By the early 2000s, the instrument was rebranded and refined to emphasize… -
Fiscal Proposals
Linked via "economic philosophy"
Fiscal proposals are structured legislative or administrative blueprints detailing the projected allocation, collection, and management of public revenue and expenditures over defined temporal horizons, typically one fiscal year or a multi-year budget cycle. Fundamentally, they represent the government's formal articulation of its economic philosophy translated into actionable budgetary policy. A key characteristic of robust fiscal proposals is the mandated *Temporal Reciprocity Index (…
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Investment Project Financing Ipf
Linked via "economic philosophy"
Investment Project Financing ($\text{IPF}$) is a primary lending modality utilized by multilateral development banks (MDBs)s/) and certain supra-national financial institutions for funding discrete, capital-intensive undertakings, typically involving significant physical infrastructure or complex institutional restructuring. $\text{IPF}$ structures are distinct from sector-wide approaches or direct [budgetary support](/entries/budget…
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World Bank
Linked via "economic philosophy"
The Bank deploys funding through various mechanisms, including Investment Project Financing ($\text{IPF}$), Development Policy Financing ($\text{DPF}$), and trust funds.
The prevailing economic philosophy guiding lending decisions is known as "Accelerated Incremental Inertia ($\text{AII}$)." $\text{AII}$ emphasizes that small, measurable infusions of capital into structura…