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  • 1
    UID:
    almafu_9958264313302883
    Format: 1 online resource (68 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: World Bank Studies
    Content: Ghana National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was established in 2003 as a major vehicle to achieve the country's commitment of Universal Health Coverage. The government has earmarked value-added tax to finance NHIS in addition to deduction from Social Security Trust (SSNIT) and premium payment. However, the scheme has been running under deficit since 2009 due to expansion of coverage, increase in service use, and surge in expenditure. Consequently, Ghana National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) had to reduce investment fund, borrow loans and delay claims reimbursement to providers in order to fill the gap. This study aimed to provide policy recommendations on how to improve efficiency and financial sustainability of NHIS based on health sector expenditure and NHIS claims expenditure review. The analysis started with an overall health sector expenditure review, zoomed into NHIS claims expenditure in Volta region as a miniature for the scheme, and followed by identifictation of factors affecting level and efficiency of expenditure. This study is the first attempt to undertake systematic in-depth analysis of NHIS claims expenditure. Based on the study findings, it is recommended that NHIS establish a stronger expenditure control system in place for long-term sustainability. The majority of NHIS claims expenditure is for outpatient consultations, district hospitals and above, certain member groups (e.g., informal group, members with more than five visits in a year). These distribution patterns are closely related to NHIS design features that encourages expenditure surge. For example, year-round open registration boosted adverse selection during enrollment, essentially fee-for-service provider mechanisms incentivized oversupply but not better quality and cost-effectiveness, and zero patient cost-sharing by patients reduced prudence in seeking care and caused overuse. Moreover, NHIA is not equipped to control expenditure or monitor effect of cost-containment policies. The claims processing system is mostly manual and does not collect information on service delivery and results. No mechanisms exist to monitor and correct providers' abonormal behaviors, as well as engage NHIS members for and engaging members for information verification, case management and prevention.
    Note: Front Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Background -- Objective -- Methodology and Data -- Organization of the Book -- Notes -- Chapter 2 The Country Context and Key Features of the Ghanaian Health Sector -- Country Context -- Health Outcomes -- Health Services -- Health Service Delivery System -- Health Financing System -- Notes -- Chapter 3 NHIS Overview -- Basic Features -- NHIS's Role in Health Care Financing -- Notes -- Chapter 4 NHIS Claims-Expenditure Review -- Trends in NHIS Claims Expenditures over Time -- Overview of Claims Expenditures in the Volta Region -- Claims Expenditure Distribution and Variation, by Provider -- Claims Expenditure Distribution and Variation, by Member Characteristics -- Examples of Potential Cost Saving Areas -- Summary -- Note -- Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Level and Efficiency of Claims Expenditures -- Behaviors of Service Providers and NHIS Members -- NHIA Internal Management -- Chapter 6 Designing Policies for Efficient Spending -- Recommendations -- Areas for Further Analytical Work -- Boxes -- Box 3.1 NHIS Exclusions -- Box 3.2 NHIA Accreditation Criteria -- Box 5.1 Key Formatting Issues for NHIS Claims Data -- Figures -- Figure 1.1 Development Indicators and Health Statistics in the Volta Region -- Figure 2.1 Equity in Health Outcomes, 2003-14 -- Figure 2.2 Ghana's Global Rank on Key Economic and Health Indicators, 1990-2013 -- Figure 2.3 Coverage of Essential Services, by Wealth Quintiles, 2003-14 -- Figure 2.4 Health Care Facilities, by Ownership -- Figure 2.5 Number of Health Workers per 1,000 People, by Region, 2016 -- Figure 2.6 The Flow of Funds in the Ghanaian Health Sector -- Figure 2.7 Per Capita Total Health Spending, 2005-12 -- Figure 2.8 Financing Sources of Total Health Expenditure, 2005-12. , Figure 3.1 NHIS Revenue Composition, 2005-14 -- Figure 3.2 NHIS Expenditure Composition, 2014 -- Figure 3.3 NHIS Membership Composition, 2014 -- Figure 3.4 NHIS Coverage, by Wealth Quintiles, 2008-14 -- Figure 3.5 NHIA Claims-Processing Flowchart -- Figure 3.6 Knowledge of NHIS Enrollment Features among NHIS Members -- Figure 3.7 Knowledge of NHIS Benefits among NHIS Members -- Figure 3.8 Public Health Financing, by Mechanism, 2014 -- Figure 3.9 Spending on MoH and NHIS as a Share of Total Public Spending, 2010-14 -- Figure 3.10 Public Spending on Goods and Services, by Recipient, 2012-15 -- Figure 4.1 NHIS Revenues and Expenditures, 2005-14 -- Figure 4.2 NHIS Balance and Changes in Investment Fund Assets -- Figure 4.3 NHIS Loan Balance and Interest Payments -- Figure 4.4 Claims Expenditures, by Service Type, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.5 Claims Expenditures, by GDRG, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.6 Distribution of Claims Expenditures, by Facility Type, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.7 Distribution of Claims Expenditures, by Facility Ownership, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.8 Per-Claim Expenditures, by Facility Type and Ownership, Outpatient Services -- Figure 4.9 Per-Claim Expenditures, by Facility Type and Ownership, Inpatient Services -- Figure 4.10 Per-Claim Expenditure on Outpatient Services among Primary Hospitals -- Figure 4.11 Per-Claim Expenditures on Inpatient Services among Primary Hospitals -- Figure 4.12 Benefit Incidence, by Membership Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.13 NHIS Members and Claims Expenditures, by Number of Outpatient Visits, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.14 NHIS Members and Claims Expenditures, by Number of Inpatient Admissions, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.15 Per-User Expenditures on Outpatient Services, by Age Group, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.16 Per-User Expenditures on Inpatient Services, by Age group, Volta, 2014. , Figure 4.17 Per-User Expenditure on Outpatient Services, by Member Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.18 Per-User Expenditure on Inpatient Services, by Member Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 5.1 Age Group Composition of Population Census, NHIS Member as of January 2014 and NHIS Members Continuously Enrolled for 12 Months -- Figure 5.2 NHIS Membership Attrition, January 2014-January 2015 -- Figure 5.3 Proportion of NHIS Members Continuously Enrolled for 12 Months in 2014, by Age Group -- Figure 5.4 Proportion of Members Utilizing Services in Volta, by Membership Renewal Tendency, 2014 -- Figure 5.5 Features of NHIS Claims Administration -- Figure 5.6 Share of Claims with Incomplete Information, by Facility Type and Ownership, Volta, 2014 -- Tables -- Table 1.1 Data Sources -- Table 2.1 Health Outcome Indicators in Ghana, 1960-2013 -- Table 2.2 Coverage of Essential Services, 2003-14 -- Table 2.3 Health Care Facilities, by Type -- Table 3.1 Tariff Rates for Selected DRGs, by Facility Type -- Table 4.1 Changes in the Total Claims Expenditures, by Component -- Table 4.2 Simulated Savings from Redistributing Outpatient Claims Expenditures -- Table 5.1 Labor Requirements Simulation for Processing One Month's NHIS Claims.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1117-2
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1118-0
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958112131602883
    Format: 1 online resource (440 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-14138-7 , 9786610141388
    Series Statement: World Development Indicators
    Content: World Development Indicators, the World Bank's respected statistical publication presents the most current and accurate information on global development on both a national level and aggregated globally. This information allows readers to monitor the progress made toward meeting the goals endorsed by the United Nations and its member countries, the World Bank, and a host of partner organizations in September 2001 in their Millennium Development Goals. The print edition of World Development Indicators 2005 allows you to consult over 80 tables and over 800 indicators for 152 economies and 14 country groups, as well as basic indicators for a further 55 economies. There are key indicators for the latest year available, important regional data, and income group analysis. The report contains six thematic presentations of analytical commentary covering: World View, People, Environment, Economy, States and Markets, and Global Links.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- FRONT -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Partners -- Users guide -- 1. WORLD VIEW -- Introduction -- Millennium Development Goals, targets, and indicators -- Tables -- 1.1 Size of the economy -- 1.2 Millennium Development Goals: eradicating poverty and improving lives -- 1.3 Millennium Development Goals: protecting our common environment -- 1.4 Millennium Development Goals: overcoming obstacles -- 1.5 Women in development -- 1.6 Key indicators for other economies -- Text figures and boxes -- Goal 1 Poverty rates are falling, but progress has been uneven -- China leads the way -- Rising poverty In Africa-and between the poverty lines -- Fewer people in extreme poverty -- Africa's poor get poorer -- Which countries are on track to reach the MDG target? -- Starbng life at a disadvantage -- Hunger rising in Africa -- Poor and malnourished -- Goal 2 More children everywhere are completing primary school -- Education for all means girls and boys -- lnefficient schools slow progress -- Rich and poor: an attendance gap -- Goal 3 More girls in school, but the 2005 target will be missed -- More women working for wages -- Few women in decisionmaking positions -- Income and tradition determine girls' opportunities for schooling -- Goal 4 lmproving the odds for children -- To reduce child deaths, infants must survive -- Many children's deaths are preventable -- Unequal risks -- Goal 5 Mothers at risk in Africa and South Asia -- Mothers die because of inadequate health care -- Needed: well trained health workers -- Poor and rural women are least well served -- Goal 6 While Sub-Saharan Africa struggles, HIV/AIDS spreads in other regions -- The risk to women is growing -- The risk of tuberculosis grows for the most vulnerable -- In Africa AIDS is leaving millions of children orphaned. , Young children bear the burden of malaria -- Goal 7 People need safe, reliable supplies of water -- Many still lack adequate sanitation -- Urban areas are expanding -- More environmental challenges ahead -- Goal 8 Many sources and many patterns of financing -- Official development assistance is rising, but still too little -- Tariffs remain high on poor countries' exports -- Debt service is falling, but more relief is needed -- New technologies are spreading quickly -- 1.1a Developing countries produce slightly less than half the world's output -- 1.2a Location of indicators for Millennium Development Goals 1-5 -- 1.3a Location of indlcators for Millennium Development Goals 6-7 -- 1.4a Location of indicators for Millennium Development Goal 8 -- 2. PEOPLE -- Introduction -- Tables -- 2.1 Population dynamics -- 2.2 Labor force structure -- 2.3 Employment by economic activity -- 2.4 Unemployment -- 2.5 Poverty -- 2.6 Social indicators of poverty -- 2.7 Distribution of income or consumption -- 2.8 Assessing vulnerability -- 2.9 Enhancing security -- 2.10 Education inputs -- 2.11 Participation in education -- 2.12 Education efficiency and completion -- 2.13 Education outcomes -- 2.14 Health: expenditure, services, and use -- 2.15 Disease prevention: coverage and quality -- 2.16 Reproductive health -- 2.17 Nutrition -- 2.18 Health: risk factors and future challenges -- 2.19 Mortality -- Text figures and boxes -- 2a Progress toward gender parity in primary, secondary, and tertiary education is uneven across regions -- 2b Achieving equal access to education for boys and girls leads to progress toward the goal -- 2c Population estimates and enrollment rates -- 2d Sustainable statistical capacity is possible in low-income countries -- 2e Key gender performance indicators -- 2.5a Regional poverty estimates. , 2.5b Coverage of survey data by developing country region, 1978-81 to 2000-01 -- 2.9a Poor people often benefit less than wealthy people from pubic health spending -- 2.11a Access to education remains elusive, especially for poor children -- 2.13a In rural areas more children drop out of primary school, and girls are more vulnerable -- 2.14a A severe maldistribution of health workers -- 2.15a Children with acute respiratory infection have bettter access to health care in urban areas -- 2.19a Inequalities in health and use of health services in Burkina Faso, 1998 -- 3. ENVIRONMENT -- lntroduction -- Tables -- 3.a Urban housing conditions -- 3.1 Rural environment and land use -- 3.2 Agricultural inputs -- 3.3 Agricultural output and productivity -- 3.4 Deforestation and biodiversity -- 3.5 Freshwater -- 3.6 Water pollution -- 3.7 Energy production and use -- 3.8 Energy efficiency, dependency, and emissions -- 3.9 Sources of electricity -- 3.10 Urbanization -- 3.11 Urban environment -- 3.12 Traffic and congestion -- 3.13 Air pollution -- 3.14 Government commitment -- 3.15 Toward a broader measure of savings -- Text figurers and boxes -- 3a High-income countries account for half the world's carbon dioxide emissions -- 3b Most future urban growth will be absorbed by developing economies -- 3c Global monitoring of housing conditions and data requirements -- 3.1a All income groups and all regions are becoming less rural -- 3.2a Arable land per person is shrinking in all regions and in all income groups -- 3.3a The 10 countries with the highest cereal yield in 2002-0- and the 10 with the lowest -- 3.5a Agriculture uses more than 71 percent of freshwater globally -- 3.6a High- and middle-income countries account for most water pollution from organic waste -- 3.7a Ten of the top 15 energy producers are low-income countries. . .. , 3.7b . . . but only 7 of the top 15 energy users are -- 3.7c High-income countries have the highest energy use per capita -- 3.8a All income groups are using energy more efficiently now -- 3.9a Sources of electricity generation have shifted differently in different income groups -- 3.10a Developing economies are becoming more urban -- 3.10b . . . and urbanization is growing fastest in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia -- 3.11a The use of public transportation for work trips varied widely across cities in 1998 -- 3.12a High-income countries have many more passenger cars per 1,000 people than developing countries do -- 3.14a The Kyoto Protocol on climate change -- 3.14b Global atmospheric concentrations of chlorofluorocarbons have leveled off -- 3.14c Global focus on biodiversity and climate change -- 4. ECONOMY -- Introduction -- Tables -- 4.a Recent economic performance -- 4.b Key macroeconomic indicators -- 4.1 Growth of output -- 4.2 Structure of output -- 4.3 Structure of manufacturing -- 4.4 Growth of merchandise trade -- 4.5 Structure of merchandise exports -- 4.6 Structure of merchandise imports -- 4.7 Structure of service exports -- 4.8 Structure of servrce imports -- 4.9 Structure of demand -- 4.10 Growth of consumption and investment -- 4.11 Central government finances -- 4.12 Central government expenses -- 4.13 Central government revenues -- 4.14 Monetary indicators and prices -- 4.15 Balance of payments current account -- 4.16 External debt -- 4.17 External debt management -- Text figures and boxes -- 4a Economic growth varies greatly across regions -- 4b With more than two decades of rapid growth East Asia and Pacific has caught up with Latin America and the Caribbean -- 4c The 10 largest holders of foreign exchange reserves in 2003 -- 4d Fewer countries had double digit inflation rates in 2003. , 4e The System of National Accounts-keeping up with the 21st century -- 4.3a Manufacturing continues to show strong growth in East Asia -- 4.5a Some developing country regions are increasing their share of merchandise exports -- 4.6a Top 10 exporters in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2003 -- 4.7a Top 10 developing country exporters of commercial services in 2003 -- 4.8a The mix of commercial service imports is changing -- 4.10a Investment has risen in Asia, but remains stagnant in Latin America and Africa -- 4.11a Selected developing countries with large cash deficits -- 4.12a Interest payments are a large part of government expenditure for some developing economies -- 4.13a Rich countries rely more on direct taxes -- 4.15a The 15 economies with the largest current account surplus and the 15 with the largest deficit-in 2002 -- 4.16a The debt burden of Sub-Saharan African countries has been falling since 1995 -- 4.17a When the present value of a country's external debt exceeds 220 percent of exports or 80 percent of GNI, the World Ban -- 5. STATES AND MARKETS -- Introduction -- Tables -- 5.1 Private sector development -- 5.2 Investment climate -- 5.3 Business environment -- 5.4 Stock markets -- 5.5 Financial depth and efficiency -- 5.6 Tax policies -- 5.7 Relative prices and exchange rates -- 5.8 Defense expenditures and arms transfers -- 5.9 Transport services -- 5.10 Power and communications -- 5.11 The information age -- 5.12 Science and technology -- Text figures and boxes -- 5a Policy uncertainty dominates the investment climate concerns of firms -- 5b Challenges in measuring the investment climate -- 5.1a Latin America and the Caribbean still has the highest investment levels, but activity has declined for the fifth consecu -- 5.9a World airline passenger traffic is expected to rebound in 2004 after two years of stagnation. , 5.10a Mobile phone access outpaced fixed-line access in some developing country regions in 2003. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-8213-6071-X
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    edocfu_9958112131602883
    Format: 1 online resource (440 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-14138-7 , 9786610141388
    Series Statement: World Development Indicators
    Content: World Development Indicators, the World Bank's respected statistical publication presents the most current and accurate information on global development on both a national level and aggregated globally. This information allows readers to monitor the progress made toward meeting the goals endorsed by the United Nations and its member countries, the World Bank, and a host of partner organizations in September 2001 in their Millennium Development Goals. The print edition of World Development Indicators 2005 allows you to consult over 80 tables and over 800 indicators for 152 economies and 14 country groups, as well as basic indicators for a further 55 economies. There are key indicators for the latest year available, important regional data, and income group analysis. The report contains six thematic presentations of analytical commentary covering: World View, People, Environment, Economy, States and Markets, and Global Links.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- FRONT -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Partners -- Users guide -- 1. WORLD VIEW -- Introduction -- Millennium Development Goals, targets, and indicators -- Tables -- 1.1 Size of the economy -- 1.2 Millennium Development Goals: eradicating poverty and improving lives -- 1.3 Millennium Development Goals: protecting our common environment -- 1.4 Millennium Development Goals: overcoming obstacles -- 1.5 Women in development -- 1.6 Key indicators for other economies -- Text figures and boxes -- Goal 1 Poverty rates are falling, but progress has been uneven -- China leads the way -- Rising poverty In Africa-and between the poverty lines -- Fewer people in extreme poverty -- Africa's poor get poorer -- Which countries are on track to reach the MDG target? -- Starbng life at a disadvantage -- Hunger rising in Africa -- Poor and malnourished -- Goal 2 More children everywhere are completing primary school -- Education for all means girls and boys -- lnefficient schools slow progress -- Rich and poor: an attendance gap -- Goal 3 More girls in school, but the 2005 target will be missed -- More women working for wages -- Few women in decisionmaking positions -- Income and tradition determine girls' opportunities for schooling -- Goal 4 lmproving the odds for children -- To reduce child deaths, infants must survive -- Many children's deaths are preventable -- Unequal risks -- Goal 5 Mothers at risk in Africa and South Asia -- Mothers die because of inadequate health care -- Needed: well trained health workers -- Poor and rural women are least well served -- Goal 6 While Sub-Saharan Africa struggles, HIV/AIDS spreads in other regions -- The risk to women is growing -- The risk of tuberculosis grows for the most vulnerable -- In Africa AIDS is leaving millions of children orphaned. , Young children bear the burden of malaria -- Goal 7 People need safe, reliable supplies of water -- Many still lack adequate sanitation -- Urban areas are expanding -- More environmental challenges ahead -- Goal 8 Many sources and many patterns of financing -- Official development assistance is rising, but still too little -- Tariffs remain high on poor countries' exports -- Debt service is falling, but more relief is needed -- New technologies are spreading quickly -- 1.1a Developing countries produce slightly less than half the world's output -- 1.2a Location of indicators for Millennium Development Goals 1-5 -- 1.3a Location of indlcators for Millennium Development Goals 6-7 -- 1.4a Location of indicators for Millennium Development Goal 8 -- 2. PEOPLE -- Introduction -- Tables -- 2.1 Population dynamics -- 2.2 Labor force structure -- 2.3 Employment by economic activity -- 2.4 Unemployment -- 2.5 Poverty -- 2.6 Social indicators of poverty -- 2.7 Distribution of income or consumption -- 2.8 Assessing vulnerability -- 2.9 Enhancing security -- 2.10 Education inputs -- 2.11 Participation in education -- 2.12 Education efficiency and completion -- 2.13 Education outcomes -- 2.14 Health: expenditure, services, and use -- 2.15 Disease prevention: coverage and quality -- 2.16 Reproductive health -- 2.17 Nutrition -- 2.18 Health: risk factors and future challenges -- 2.19 Mortality -- Text figures and boxes -- 2a Progress toward gender parity in primary, secondary, and tertiary education is uneven across regions -- 2b Achieving equal access to education for boys and girls leads to progress toward the goal -- 2c Population estimates and enrollment rates -- 2d Sustainable statistical capacity is possible in low-income countries -- 2e Key gender performance indicators -- 2.5a Regional poverty estimates. , 2.5b Coverage of survey data by developing country region, 1978-81 to 2000-01 -- 2.9a Poor people often benefit less than wealthy people from pubic health spending -- 2.11a Access to education remains elusive, especially for poor children -- 2.13a In rural areas more children drop out of primary school, and girls are more vulnerable -- 2.14a A severe maldistribution of health workers -- 2.15a Children with acute respiratory infection have bettter access to health care in urban areas -- 2.19a Inequalities in health and use of health services in Burkina Faso, 1998 -- 3. ENVIRONMENT -- lntroduction -- Tables -- 3.a Urban housing conditions -- 3.1 Rural environment and land use -- 3.2 Agricultural inputs -- 3.3 Agricultural output and productivity -- 3.4 Deforestation and biodiversity -- 3.5 Freshwater -- 3.6 Water pollution -- 3.7 Energy production and use -- 3.8 Energy efficiency, dependency, and emissions -- 3.9 Sources of electricity -- 3.10 Urbanization -- 3.11 Urban environment -- 3.12 Traffic and congestion -- 3.13 Air pollution -- 3.14 Government commitment -- 3.15 Toward a broader measure of savings -- Text figurers and boxes -- 3a High-income countries account for half the world's carbon dioxide emissions -- 3b Most future urban growth will be absorbed by developing economies -- 3c Global monitoring of housing conditions and data requirements -- 3.1a All income groups and all regions are becoming less rural -- 3.2a Arable land per person is shrinking in all regions and in all income groups -- 3.3a The 10 countries with the highest cereal yield in 2002-0- and the 10 with the lowest -- 3.5a Agriculture uses more than 71 percent of freshwater globally -- 3.6a High- and middle-income countries account for most water pollution from organic waste -- 3.7a Ten of the top 15 energy producers are low-income countries. . .. , 3.7b . . . but only 7 of the top 15 energy users are -- 3.7c High-income countries have the highest energy use per capita -- 3.8a All income groups are using energy more efficiently now -- 3.9a Sources of electricity generation have shifted differently in different income groups -- 3.10a Developing economies are becoming more urban -- 3.10b . . . and urbanization is growing fastest in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia -- 3.11a The use of public transportation for work trips varied widely across cities in 1998 -- 3.12a High-income countries have many more passenger cars per 1,000 people than developing countries do -- 3.14a The Kyoto Protocol on climate change -- 3.14b Global atmospheric concentrations of chlorofluorocarbons have leveled off -- 3.14c Global focus on biodiversity and climate change -- 4. ECONOMY -- Introduction -- Tables -- 4.a Recent economic performance -- 4.b Key macroeconomic indicators -- 4.1 Growth of output -- 4.2 Structure of output -- 4.3 Structure of manufacturing -- 4.4 Growth of merchandise trade -- 4.5 Structure of merchandise exports -- 4.6 Structure of merchandise imports -- 4.7 Structure of service exports -- 4.8 Structure of servrce imports -- 4.9 Structure of demand -- 4.10 Growth of consumption and investment -- 4.11 Central government finances -- 4.12 Central government expenses -- 4.13 Central government revenues -- 4.14 Monetary indicators and prices -- 4.15 Balance of payments current account -- 4.16 External debt -- 4.17 External debt management -- Text figures and boxes -- 4a Economic growth varies greatly across regions -- 4b With more than two decades of rapid growth East Asia and Pacific has caught up with Latin America and the Caribbean -- 4c The 10 largest holders of foreign exchange reserves in 2003 -- 4d Fewer countries had double digit inflation rates in 2003. , 4e The System of National Accounts-keeping up with the 21st century -- 4.3a Manufacturing continues to show strong growth in East Asia -- 4.5a Some developing country regions are increasing their share of merchandise exports -- 4.6a Top 10 exporters in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2003 -- 4.7a Top 10 developing country exporters of commercial services in 2003 -- 4.8a The mix of commercial service imports is changing -- 4.10a Investment has risen in Asia, but remains stagnant in Latin America and Africa -- 4.11a Selected developing countries with large cash deficits -- 4.12a Interest payments are a large part of government expenditure for some developing economies -- 4.13a Rich countries rely more on direct taxes -- 4.15a The 15 economies with the largest current account surplus and the 15 with the largest deficit-in 2002 -- 4.16a The debt burden of Sub-Saharan African countries has been falling since 1995 -- 4.17a When the present value of a country's external debt exceeds 220 percent of exports or 80 percent of GNI, the World Ban -- 5. STATES AND MARKETS -- Introduction -- Tables -- 5.1 Private sector development -- 5.2 Investment climate -- 5.3 Business environment -- 5.4 Stock markets -- 5.5 Financial depth and efficiency -- 5.6 Tax policies -- 5.7 Relative prices and exchange rates -- 5.8 Defense expenditures and arms transfers -- 5.9 Transport services -- 5.10 Power and communications -- 5.11 The information age -- 5.12 Science and technology -- Text figures and boxes -- 5a Policy uncertainty dominates the investment climate concerns of firms -- 5b Challenges in measuring the investment climate -- 5.1a Latin America and the Caribbean still has the highest investment levels, but activity has declined for the fifth consecu -- 5.9a World airline passenger traffic is expected to rebound in 2004 after two years of stagnation. , 5.10a Mobile phone access outpaced fixed-line access in some developing country regions in 2003. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-8213-6071-X
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 4
    UID:
    edoccha_9958869780602883
    Format: 1 online resource (104 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-4648-1227-6
    Series Statement: World Bank Studies
    Content: Drylands account for three-quarters of Sub-Saharan Africa's cropland, two-thirds of cereal production, and four-fifths of livestock holdings. Today frequent and severe shocks, especially droughts, limit the livelihood opportunities available to millions of households and undermine efforts to eradicate poverty in the drylands. Prospects for sustainable development of drylands are assessed in this book through the lens of resilience, understood here to mean the ability of people to withstand and respond to droughts and other shocks. An original model was developed expressly to consistently and coherently evaluate different type of interventions on the ground, which provided a common framework to anticipate thescale of the challenges likely to arise in drylands, as well as to generate insights into opportunities for addressing those challenges.Such modeling framework consisted in a) estimating the baseline vulnerability profiles of people living in drylands (2010), b) estimate the evolution of vulnerability by 2030 under a range of assumptions, c) calculated the number of people affectedby drought in the different administrative units of each country, and d) evaluate different types of interventions in agriculture and livestock for mitigating drought impact by calculating the potential for reducing the number of people affected for each scenario and conducting a simplified - benefit/cost (B/C) analysis for each type of intervention.For livestock, simulation models were used to estimate the impacts of feed balances, livestock production, and household income resilience interventions under different climate scenarios). For agriculture, the DSSAT (Decision Support System for-Agrotechnology Transfer) framework was used to assess the potential impact on yields likely to result from adoption of five crop farming technologies: (1) drought-tolerant varieties, (2) heat-tolerant varieties, (3) additional fertilizer, (4) agroforestry practices, (S) irrigation (6) water-harvesting techniques and selected combinations thereof.
    Note: Front Cover -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- About the Editors and Authors -- Abbreviations -- Overview -- Background -- The Model -- The Interventions -- The Results -- Policy Implications -- Cost Implications of Interventions -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Defining "Drylands" -- Definition of "Resilience" -- Note -- References -- Chapter 2 Methodology -- Country Coverage -- Main Assumptions and Sources of Data -- Relationship between Resilience and Poverty -- Estimation of 2010 Vulnerability Profiles -- Estimation of 2030 Vulnerability Profiles -- Moving from "Vulnerable to Drought" to "Affected by Drought" -- Interventions -- Resilience Analysis for Livestock Systems -- Resilience Analysis for Rainfed Cropping Systems -- Resilience Analysis for Irrigation -- Cost Estimates -- Consolidating the Results of the Resilience Analysis -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3 Results -- Baseline Vulnerability, 2010 -- Baseline Vulnerability, 2030 -- Intervention Results -- Consolidated Results -- Do Investments in Resilience Pay Off? -- References -- Chapter 4 Policy Implications -- Reference -- Boxes -- Box 2.1 Projecting Irrigation Expansion Potential in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2030 -- Box 4.1 Selected Recommendations to Make Current Livelihoods More Resilient -- Figures -- Figure 1.1 Poverty Head Count by Aridity Zone, Selected East and West African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 2.1 Model Coverage: Drylands Population Equivalents for Countries Included in the Analysis -- Figure 2.2 Income Sources in Drylands vs. Non-Drylands, Selected East and West African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 2.3 Integration of Livestock Models -- Figure 2.4 Burkina Faso: Cumulative Distribution of Cattle Ownership -- Figure 2.5 Share of the Pastoral Population (%) above the Resilience Level (2010), by Country, Disaggregated by Pure Pastoralists and Agro-Pastoralists. , Figure 2.6 Share of Agriculture in Total Employment, Selected Lower- and Middle-Income Countries -- Figure 2.7 Share of the Pastoral Population (%) above Resilience Level (2030) under the Baseline Scenario, by Country -- Figure 2.8 Estimated Population Affected in a Polygon as a Function of Deviations in the Drought Index from the Benchmark -- Figure 2.9 Africa RiskView Estimates of Drought-Affected People in Mauritania Expected for Each of 25 Simulated Yield Years -- Figure 2.10 Estimated Unit Cost (US/Person Made Resilient/Year, Expressed on a Log Scale) under Baseline Climate and Health and Early Offtake Scenarios -- Figure 3.1 Exposure Level in East and West Africa, 2010 -- Figure 3.2 Estimated Drylands Population Dependent on Agriculture, by Country and Livelihood Type (Millions of People), Selected West and East African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 3.3 Percentage of People Vulnerable to and Affected by Drought, Selected West and East African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 3.4 Projected Rural Population in 2030 (2010 = 100, Medium Fertility Scenario), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.5 Number of People in Drylands Projected to Be Dependent on Agriculture in 2030 (2010 = 100, Medium Fertility Scenario), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.6 Percentage Change in Agriculture-Dependent Population, 2010-30, by Livelihood System under Medium-Fertility Scenario -- Figure 3.7 Share of 2010 Population Likely to Drop Out of Pastoralism by 2030, Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.8 People Vulnerable to/Affected by Drought in 2030 (2010 = 100%) -- Figure 3.9 Share of 2030 GDP Required to Protect Drought-Affected Population through Social Safety Net Interventions, Selected West and East African Countries. , Figure 3.10 Vulnerable People in Drylands in 2030 (2010 = 100, Medium-Fertility Scenario), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.11 Vulnerable People in Drylands in 2030 (2010 = 100, Different Fertility Scenarios), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.12 The Effect of the Two Key Interventions on Vulnerability Levels under the Baseline Weather Scenario -- Figure 3.13 The Cumulative Effect of Key Interventions on Vulnerability Levels under the Baseline Weather Scenario -- Figure 3.14 Reduction in Exits from Pastoralism because of Technological Interventions, Selected West and East African Countries, 2030 -- Figure 3.15 Relative Contributions of Technological Interventions in Reducing Vulnerability, Selected West and East African Countries, 2030 -- Figure 3.16 Relative Contributions of Technological Interventions in Reducing Vulnerability, by Aridity Zone, 2030 -- Figure 3.17 Importance of Targeting Technological Interventions -- Figure 3.18 Estimated Reduction in the Average Number of Drought-Affected People through Use of FMNR and Other Technologies by 2030 -- Figure 3.19 Land Area with Irrigation Investment Potential under Alternative Assumptions of Irrigation Costs and IRRs -- Figure 3.20 Beneficiary Population under Alternative Assumptions of Irrigation Costs and IRRs -- Figure 3.21 Contribution of Technological Interventions to Resilience in 2030 (2010 = 100%), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.22 Benefit/Cost Ratios of Resilience Interventions, Selected West and East African Countries -- Maps -- Map 1.1 Dryland Regions of West and East Africa -- Map 1.2 Shift and Expansion by 2050 of Dryland Areas Caused by Climate Change -- Map 2.1 Data Availability by Type of Intervention -- Map 2.2 Crop by Aridity Zone/Admin Unit. , Map 3.1 Projected Number of Drought-Affected People, Annual Average, Selected Countries, 2010 -- Tables -- Table 1.1 Aridity Zones Defined -- Table 1.2 Shares of Households in Transition across Poverty Status, Ethiopia, 1994-2009 -- Table 2.1 Approach and Assumptions Used in Estimating Vulnerability in the Model -- Table 2.2 Models Used for the Resilience Analysis, by Aridity Zone -- Table 2.3 How the Various Aridity Classes Are Aggregated into Aridity Zones -- Table 2.4 Estimated Agriculture-Dependent Population in East and West Africa, 2010 -- Table 2.5 Three Dimensions of Vulnerability in Africa's Drylands, 2010 (Million People) -- Table 2.6 Gini Coefficient of Livestock Ownership, Selected West and East African Countries -- Table 2.7 Mauritania Vulnerability Profile (Population, Millions) -- Table 2.8 Coverage of Resilience Interventions -- Table 2.9 Maize, Millet, and Sorghum Cropping Calendar, Selected West and East African Countries -- Table B2.1.1 Current Inventory of Large Dams in African Countries -- Table 2.10 Aquifer Classification in British Geological Survey Groundwater Data -- Table 2.11 Criteria Used to Assess Environmental Suitability of Large-Scale Irrigation Investment (within the Delineated Command Areas of Reservoirs) -- Table 2.12 Criteria Used to Assess Environmental Suitability of Small-Scale Irrigation Investment -- Table 2.13 Estimated Annual Costs of Resilience Interventions (US Billions/year) -- Table 2.14 Average Cost/Person/Year of the Main Interventions in Five Dryland Livestock Development Projects (US) -- Table 2.15 Assumptions about the Allocation of Adoption- and Non-Adoption-Related Costs -- Table 2.16 Summary of Costs (Average 2011-14 Prices, US Billions) of Health and Early Offtake Interventions and Their Distribution between the Public and Private Sectors (2011-30). , Table 2.17 Public Costs of Technology Transfer (US/hectare) -- Table 2.18 Private Costs of Technology Adoption (US/hectare) -- Table 2.19 Irrigation Development Unit Cost Assumptions (US/hectare) -- Table 2.20 Coverage of Livelihood Modeling by Aridity Zone -- Table 3.1 Minimum Number of TLU per Household Required to Attain Resilience -- Table 3.2 Livestock Population Growth (Offtake + Population Growth), 2012-30, as Affected by Technology and Climate -- Table 3.3 Irrigation Development Potential by 2030 (1,000 ha, Medium-Cost-5% IRR), Selected West and East African Countries -- Table 3.4 Estimated Beneficiary Population (1,000 People, Medium-Cost 5% IRR), Selected West and East African Countries -- Table 3.5 Beneficiary Population by Aridity Zone (1,000 People, Medium-Cost-5% IRR).
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1226-8
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    almafu_9958869780602883
    Format: 1 online resource (104 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-4648-1227-6
    Series Statement: World Bank Studies
    Content: Drylands account for three-quarters of Sub-Saharan Africa's cropland, two-thirds of cereal production, and four-fifths of livestock holdings. Today frequent and severe shocks, especially droughts, limit the livelihood opportunities available to millions of households and undermine efforts to eradicate poverty in the drylands. Prospects for sustainable development of drylands are assessed in this book through the lens of resilience, understood here to mean the ability of people to withstand and respond to droughts and other shocks. An original model was developed expressly to consistently and coherently evaluate different type of interventions on the ground, which provided a common framework to anticipate thescale of the challenges likely to arise in drylands, as well as to generate insights into opportunities for addressing those challenges.Such modeling framework consisted in a) estimating the baseline vulnerability profiles of people living in drylands (2010), b) estimate the evolution of vulnerability by 2030 under a range of assumptions, c) calculated the number of people affectedby drought in the different administrative units of each country, and d) evaluate different types of interventions in agriculture and livestock for mitigating drought impact by calculating the potential for reducing the number of people affected for each scenario and conducting a simplified - benefit/cost (B/C) analysis for each type of intervention.For livestock, simulation models were used to estimate the impacts of feed balances, livestock production, and household income resilience interventions under different climate scenarios). For agriculture, the DSSAT (Decision Support System for-Agrotechnology Transfer) framework was used to assess the potential impact on yields likely to result from adoption of five crop farming technologies: (1) drought-tolerant varieties, (2) heat-tolerant varieties, (3) additional fertilizer, (4) agroforestry practices, (S) irrigation (6) water-harvesting techniques and selected combinations thereof.
    Note: Front Cover -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- About the Editors and Authors -- Abbreviations -- Overview -- Background -- The Model -- The Interventions -- The Results -- Policy Implications -- Cost Implications of Interventions -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Defining "Drylands" -- Definition of "Resilience" -- Note -- References -- Chapter 2 Methodology -- Country Coverage -- Main Assumptions and Sources of Data -- Relationship between Resilience and Poverty -- Estimation of 2010 Vulnerability Profiles -- Estimation of 2030 Vulnerability Profiles -- Moving from "Vulnerable to Drought" to "Affected by Drought" -- Interventions -- Resilience Analysis for Livestock Systems -- Resilience Analysis for Rainfed Cropping Systems -- Resilience Analysis for Irrigation -- Cost Estimates -- Consolidating the Results of the Resilience Analysis -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3 Results -- Baseline Vulnerability, 2010 -- Baseline Vulnerability, 2030 -- Intervention Results -- Consolidated Results -- Do Investments in Resilience Pay Off? -- References -- Chapter 4 Policy Implications -- Reference -- Boxes -- Box 2.1 Projecting Irrigation Expansion Potential in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2030 -- Box 4.1 Selected Recommendations to Make Current Livelihoods More Resilient -- Figures -- Figure 1.1 Poverty Head Count by Aridity Zone, Selected East and West African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 2.1 Model Coverage: Drylands Population Equivalents for Countries Included in the Analysis -- Figure 2.2 Income Sources in Drylands vs. Non-Drylands, Selected East and West African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 2.3 Integration of Livestock Models -- Figure 2.4 Burkina Faso: Cumulative Distribution of Cattle Ownership -- Figure 2.5 Share of the Pastoral Population (%) above the Resilience Level (2010), by Country, Disaggregated by Pure Pastoralists and Agro-Pastoralists. , Figure 2.6 Share of Agriculture in Total Employment, Selected Lower- and Middle-Income Countries -- Figure 2.7 Share of the Pastoral Population (%) above Resilience Level (2030) under the Baseline Scenario, by Country -- Figure 2.8 Estimated Population Affected in a Polygon as a Function of Deviations in the Drought Index from the Benchmark -- Figure 2.9 Africa RiskView Estimates of Drought-Affected People in Mauritania Expected for Each of 25 Simulated Yield Years -- Figure 2.10 Estimated Unit Cost (US/Person Made Resilient/Year, Expressed on a Log Scale) under Baseline Climate and Health and Early Offtake Scenarios -- Figure 3.1 Exposure Level in East and West Africa, 2010 -- Figure 3.2 Estimated Drylands Population Dependent on Agriculture, by Country and Livelihood Type (Millions of People), Selected West and East African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 3.3 Percentage of People Vulnerable to and Affected by Drought, Selected West and East African Countries, 2010 -- Figure 3.4 Projected Rural Population in 2030 (2010 = 100, Medium Fertility Scenario), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.5 Number of People in Drylands Projected to Be Dependent on Agriculture in 2030 (2010 = 100, Medium Fertility Scenario), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.6 Percentage Change in Agriculture-Dependent Population, 2010-30, by Livelihood System under Medium-Fertility Scenario -- Figure 3.7 Share of 2010 Population Likely to Drop Out of Pastoralism by 2030, Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.8 People Vulnerable to/Affected by Drought in 2030 (2010 = 100%) -- Figure 3.9 Share of 2030 GDP Required to Protect Drought-Affected Population through Social Safety Net Interventions, Selected West and East African Countries. , Figure 3.10 Vulnerable People in Drylands in 2030 (2010 = 100, Medium-Fertility Scenario), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.11 Vulnerable People in Drylands in 2030 (2010 = 100, Different Fertility Scenarios), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.12 The Effect of the Two Key Interventions on Vulnerability Levels under the Baseline Weather Scenario -- Figure 3.13 The Cumulative Effect of Key Interventions on Vulnerability Levels under the Baseline Weather Scenario -- Figure 3.14 Reduction in Exits from Pastoralism because of Technological Interventions, Selected West and East African Countries, 2030 -- Figure 3.15 Relative Contributions of Technological Interventions in Reducing Vulnerability, Selected West and East African Countries, 2030 -- Figure 3.16 Relative Contributions of Technological Interventions in Reducing Vulnerability, by Aridity Zone, 2030 -- Figure 3.17 Importance of Targeting Technological Interventions -- Figure 3.18 Estimated Reduction in the Average Number of Drought-Affected People through Use of FMNR and Other Technologies by 2030 -- Figure 3.19 Land Area with Irrigation Investment Potential under Alternative Assumptions of Irrigation Costs and IRRs -- Figure 3.20 Beneficiary Population under Alternative Assumptions of Irrigation Costs and IRRs -- Figure 3.21 Contribution of Technological Interventions to Resilience in 2030 (2010 = 100%), Selected West and East African Countries -- Figure 3.22 Benefit/Cost Ratios of Resilience Interventions, Selected West and East African Countries -- Maps -- Map 1.1 Dryland Regions of West and East Africa -- Map 1.2 Shift and Expansion by 2050 of Dryland Areas Caused by Climate Change -- Map 2.1 Data Availability by Type of Intervention -- Map 2.2 Crop by Aridity Zone/Admin Unit. , Map 3.1 Projected Number of Drought-Affected People, Annual Average, Selected Countries, 2010 -- Tables -- Table 1.1 Aridity Zones Defined -- Table 1.2 Shares of Households in Transition across Poverty Status, Ethiopia, 1994-2009 -- Table 2.1 Approach and Assumptions Used in Estimating Vulnerability in the Model -- Table 2.2 Models Used for the Resilience Analysis, by Aridity Zone -- Table 2.3 How the Various Aridity Classes Are Aggregated into Aridity Zones -- Table 2.4 Estimated Agriculture-Dependent Population in East and West Africa, 2010 -- Table 2.5 Three Dimensions of Vulnerability in Africa's Drylands, 2010 (Million People) -- Table 2.6 Gini Coefficient of Livestock Ownership, Selected West and East African Countries -- Table 2.7 Mauritania Vulnerability Profile (Population, Millions) -- Table 2.8 Coverage of Resilience Interventions -- Table 2.9 Maize, Millet, and Sorghum Cropping Calendar, Selected West and East African Countries -- Table B2.1.1 Current Inventory of Large Dams in African Countries -- Table 2.10 Aquifer Classification in British Geological Survey Groundwater Data -- Table 2.11 Criteria Used to Assess Environmental Suitability of Large-Scale Irrigation Investment (within the Delineated Command Areas of Reservoirs) -- Table 2.12 Criteria Used to Assess Environmental Suitability of Small-Scale Irrigation Investment -- Table 2.13 Estimated Annual Costs of Resilience Interventions (US Billions/year) -- Table 2.14 Average Cost/Person/Year of the Main Interventions in Five Dryland Livestock Development Projects (US) -- Table 2.15 Assumptions about the Allocation of Adoption- and Non-Adoption-Related Costs -- Table 2.16 Summary of Costs (Average 2011-14 Prices, US Billions) of Health and Early Offtake Interventions and Their Distribution between the Public and Private Sectors (2011-30). , Table 2.17 Public Costs of Technology Transfer (US/hectare) -- Table 2.18 Private Costs of Technology Adoption (US/hectare) -- Table 2.19 Irrigation Development Unit Cost Assumptions (US/hectare) -- Table 2.20 Coverage of Livelihood Modeling by Aridity Zone -- Table 3.1 Minimum Number of TLU per Household Required to Attain Resilience -- Table 3.2 Livestock Population Growth (Offtake + Population Growth), 2012-30, as Affected by Technology and Climate -- Table 3.3 Irrigation Development Potential by 2030 (1,000 ha, Medium-Cost-5% IRR), Selected West and East African Countries -- Table 3.4 Estimated Beneficiary Population (1,000 People, Medium-Cost 5% IRR), Selected West and East African Countries -- Table 3.5 Beneficiary Population by Aridity Zone (1,000 People, Medium-Cost-5% IRR).
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1226-8
    Language: English
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Singapore :Springer,
    UID:
    edoccha_9961535655902883
    Format: 1 online resource (145 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 981-9710-07-3
    Series Statement: SpringerBriefs in Population Studies
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Prologue-Introducing This Book -- Contents -- About the Author -- 1 Introduction: Shrinking Japan, the Goki-Shichido, the Sannyodo, the Municipal Power, and the Methodology -- 1.1 World Population Continues to Grow, but the Pace of Growth is Slowing Down -- 1.2 The Beginning of Shrinking Japan -- 1.3 Shrinking Japan and Regional Variations -- 1.3.1 Shrinking Japan Defined -- 1.3.2 Sustainable Japan and Regional Revitalization Law of 2014 -- 1.3.3 Municipal Power Defined -- 1.4 The Goki-Shichido (Five Home Provinces and Seven Circuits) and Provinces Under the Ritsuryo Code, and the Baku-Han Taisei of the Edo Shogunate -- 1.4.1 The Goki-Shichido (Five Home Provinces and Seven Circuits) and Provinces Under the Ritsuryo Code -- 1.4.2 Gokaido of the Edo Period -- 1.4.3 The Baku-Han Taisei -- 1.5 The Sannyodo -- 1.6 Municipal Mergers -- 1.6.1 A Brief History of Municipal Mergers -- 1.6.2 Disadvantages of Municipal Mergers and Their Countermeasures -- 1.7 Basis for the Selection of Prefectures for In-Depth Studies: Hiroshima and Yamaguchi -- 1.8 Basis for the Selection of Municipalities Within the Prefecture -- 1.9 A Brief Explanation of the Methodology of the Study -- Notes -- References -- 2 Hiroshima Prefecture Along the Sannyodo of the Goki-Shichido and Regional Variations -- 2.1 The Outlook and Regions of Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.2 Climate of Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.3 Culture of Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.4 Industries of Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.5 A Brief History of Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.5.1 A Brief History of Hiroshima -- 2.5.2 Hiroshima and the Saigoku-kaido -- 2.6 Population of Hiroshima Prefecture Today -- 2.6.1 Hiroshima-shi, an Ordinance-Designated City -- 2.6.2 Changes in the Population of Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.6.3 Changes in the Households of Hiroshima Prefecture. , 2.6.4 Changes in the Size of the Kin Family Household in Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.6.5 Foreign Resident Population in Hiroshima Prefecture -- 2.6.6 Birth, Total Fertility Rates, Marriage, Divorce, and Deaths -- 2.7 Household Type, Marriage Power, and Population-Sustaining Power: Hiroshima Prefecture by Region, Higashihiroshima-shi, Saka-cho, and Akiota-cho -- 2.8 Population Changes by Age Group: Hiroshima Prefecture, Higashihiroshima-shi, Saka-cho, and Akiota-cho -- 2.9 Radar Chart of Hiroshima Prefecture: Higashihiroshima-shi, Saka-cho, and Akiota-cho -- 2.9.1 A Brief Discussion of Municipal Power of Higashihiroshima-shi -- 2.9.2 A Brief Discussion of Municipal Power of Saka-cho -- 2.10 Municipal Power of Akiota-cho of the Aki-Hiroshima Area -- 2.10.1 An Overview, and a Brief History of Akiota-cho -- 2.10.2 Depopulation and Population Changes in Akiota-cho -- 2.10.3 Summary Results of the "Akiota-cho Community Development Questionnaire Survey" -- 2.10.4 Municipal Power of Akiota-cho: The Town of Forest Therapy -- 2.10.5 Measures to Support Settled and/or Migrant Population to Akiota-cho -- 2.10.6 Unresolved Issues of Akiota-cho -- Notes -- References -- 3 Yamaguchi Prefecture Along the Sannyodo of the Goki-Shichido and Regional Variations -- 3.1 The Outlook and Regions of Yamaguchi Prefecture -- 3.2 Climate of Yamaguchi Prefecture -- 3.3 Culture of Yamaguchi Prefecture -- 3.4 Industries of Yamaguchi Prefecture -- 3.5 A Brief History of Yamaguchi Prefecture -- 3.6 Population of Yamaguchi Prefecture Today -- 3.6.1 The Total Population -- 3.6.2 Population by City and Town -- 3.6.3 Natural Population Increase Rate (Per 1,000 Population) -- 3.6.4 Social Population Increase Rate (Per 1,000 Population) -- 3.7 Foreign Resident Population in Yamaguchi Prefecture. , 3.8 Household Type, Marriage Power, and Population-Sustaining Power: Yamaguchi Prefecture by Region, Kudamatsu-shi, Waki-cho, and Kaminoseki-cho -- 3.9 Population Changes by Age Group: Yamaguchi Prefecture, Kudamatsu-shi, Waki-cho, and Kaminoseki-cho -- 3.10 Radar Chart of Yamaguchi Prefecture: Kudamatsu-shi, Waki-cho, and Kaminoseki-cho -- 3.10.1 A Brief Discussion of Municipal Power of Kudamatsu-shi -- 3.10.2 A Brief Discussion of Municipal Power of Waki-cho -- 3.11 Municipal Power of Kaminoseki-cho of the Suo-Tobu Area -- 3.11.1 An Overview, and a Brief History of Kaminoseki-cho -- 3.11.2 Depopulation and Population Changes in Kaminoseki-cho -- 3.11.3 The Project to Construct the Nuclear Power Plant, and the Consideration of the Construction of Interim Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage Facility in Kaminoseki-cho -- 3.11.4 Municipal Power of Kaminoseki-cho: The Town of Traditional Matsuri Culture and the Flowering Sea Town -- 3.11.5 The Number of Visitors to Kaminoseki-cho -- 3.11.6 Unresolved Issues of Kaminoseki-cho -- Notes -- References -- 4 Epilogue: Shrinking Japan and Foreign Residents with Special Attention to Sannyodo -- 4.1 Shrinking Japan Due to Fertility Decline and the Population Aging -- 4.2 Japanese Population by Prefecture: 2020 and 2045 -- 4.3 Changes in Foreign Residents in Japan -- 4.4 Foreign Residents in Japan by Prefecture -- 4.4.1 Foreign Brides in Rural Areas -- 4.4.2 Foreign Workers -- 4.4.3 History of Immigration Act -- 4.4.4 Revised Immigration and Refugee Recognition Act of 2019 -- 4.4.5 Foreign Workers by Prefecture -- 4.5 Foreign Residents in Three Prefectures Along the Sannyodo: Okayama, Hiroshima, and Yamaguchi -- 4.5.1 Foreign Residents in Okayama Prefecture -- 4.5.2 Foreign Residents in Hiroshima Prefecture -- 4.5.3 Foreign Residents in Yamaguchi Prefecture. , 4.6 Changes in Nationalities of Foreign Residents Over the Past 30 Years -- 4.7 Proposed New System of Technical Internship and Specified Technical Skills -- Notes -- References -- Author Index -- Subject Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 981-9710-06-5
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    edoccha_9958264313302883
    Format: 1 online resource (68 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: World Bank Studies
    Content: Ghana National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was established in 2003 as a major vehicle to achieve the country's commitment of Universal Health Coverage. The government has earmarked value-added tax to finance NHIS in addition to deduction from Social Security Trust (SSNIT) and premium payment. However, the scheme has been running under deficit since 2009 due to expansion of coverage, increase in service use, and surge in expenditure. Consequently, Ghana National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) had to reduce investment fund, borrow loans and delay claims reimbursement to providers in order to fill the gap. This study aimed to provide policy recommendations on how to improve efficiency and financial sustainability of NHIS based on health sector expenditure and NHIS claims expenditure review. The analysis started with an overall health sector expenditure review, zoomed into NHIS claims expenditure in Volta region as a miniature for the scheme, and followed by identifictation of factors affecting level and efficiency of expenditure. This study is the first attempt to undertake systematic in-depth analysis of NHIS claims expenditure. Based on the study findings, it is recommended that NHIS establish a stronger expenditure control system in place for long-term sustainability. The majority of NHIS claims expenditure is for outpatient consultations, district hospitals and above, certain member groups (e.g., informal group, members with more than five visits in a year). These distribution patterns are closely related to NHIS design features that encourages expenditure surge. For example, year-round open registration boosted adverse selection during enrollment, essentially fee-for-service provider mechanisms incentivized oversupply but not better quality and cost-effectiveness, and zero patient cost-sharing by patients reduced prudence in seeking care and caused overuse. Moreover, NHIA is not equipped to control expenditure or monitor effect of cost-containment policies. The claims processing system is mostly manual and does not collect information on service delivery and results. No mechanisms exist to monitor and correct providers' abonormal behaviors, as well as engage NHIS members for and engaging members for information verification, case management and prevention.
    Note: Front Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Background -- Objective -- Methodology and Data -- Organization of the Book -- Notes -- Chapter 2 The Country Context and Key Features of the Ghanaian Health Sector -- Country Context -- Health Outcomes -- Health Services -- Health Service Delivery System -- Health Financing System -- Notes -- Chapter 3 NHIS Overview -- Basic Features -- NHIS's Role in Health Care Financing -- Notes -- Chapter 4 NHIS Claims-Expenditure Review -- Trends in NHIS Claims Expenditures over Time -- Overview of Claims Expenditures in the Volta Region -- Claims Expenditure Distribution and Variation, by Provider -- Claims Expenditure Distribution and Variation, by Member Characteristics -- Examples of Potential Cost Saving Areas -- Summary -- Note -- Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Level and Efficiency of Claims Expenditures -- Behaviors of Service Providers and NHIS Members -- NHIA Internal Management -- Chapter 6 Designing Policies for Efficient Spending -- Recommendations -- Areas for Further Analytical Work -- Boxes -- Box 3.1 NHIS Exclusions -- Box 3.2 NHIA Accreditation Criteria -- Box 5.1 Key Formatting Issues for NHIS Claims Data -- Figures -- Figure 1.1 Development Indicators and Health Statistics in the Volta Region -- Figure 2.1 Equity in Health Outcomes, 2003-14 -- Figure 2.2 Ghana's Global Rank on Key Economic and Health Indicators, 1990-2013 -- Figure 2.3 Coverage of Essential Services, by Wealth Quintiles, 2003-14 -- Figure 2.4 Health Care Facilities, by Ownership -- Figure 2.5 Number of Health Workers per 1,000 People, by Region, 2016 -- Figure 2.6 The Flow of Funds in the Ghanaian Health Sector -- Figure 2.7 Per Capita Total Health Spending, 2005-12 -- Figure 2.8 Financing Sources of Total Health Expenditure, 2005-12. , Figure 3.1 NHIS Revenue Composition, 2005-14 -- Figure 3.2 NHIS Expenditure Composition, 2014 -- Figure 3.3 NHIS Membership Composition, 2014 -- Figure 3.4 NHIS Coverage, by Wealth Quintiles, 2008-14 -- Figure 3.5 NHIA Claims-Processing Flowchart -- Figure 3.6 Knowledge of NHIS Enrollment Features among NHIS Members -- Figure 3.7 Knowledge of NHIS Benefits among NHIS Members -- Figure 3.8 Public Health Financing, by Mechanism, 2014 -- Figure 3.9 Spending on MoH and NHIS as a Share of Total Public Spending, 2010-14 -- Figure 3.10 Public Spending on Goods and Services, by Recipient, 2012-15 -- Figure 4.1 NHIS Revenues and Expenditures, 2005-14 -- Figure 4.2 NHIS Balance and Changes in Investment Fund Assets -- Figure 4.3 NHIS Loan Balance and Interest Payments -- Figure 4.4 Claims Expenditures, by Service Type, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.5 Claims Expenditures, by GDRG, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.6 Distribution of Claims Expenditures, by Facility Type, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.7 Distribution of Claims Expenditures, by Facility Ownership, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.8 Per-Claim Expenditures, by Facility Type and Ownership, Outpatient Services -- Figure 4.9 Per-Claim Expenditures, by Facility Type and Ownership, Inpatient Services -- Figure 4.10 Per-Claim Expenditure on Outpatient Services among Primary Hospitals -- Figure 4.11 Per-Claim Expenditures on Inpatient Services among Primary Hospitals -- Figure 4.12 Benefit Incidence, by Membership Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.13 NHIS Members and Claims Expenditures, by Number of Outpatient Visits, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.14 NHIS Members and Claims Expenditures, by Number of Inpatient Admissions, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.15 Per-User Expenditures on Outpatient Services, by Age Group, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.16 Per-User Expenditures on Inpatient Services, by Age group, Volta, 2014. , Figure 4.17 Per-User Expenditure on Outpatient Services, by Member Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.18 Per-User Expenditure on Inpatient Services, by Member Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 5.1 Age Group Composition of Population Census, NHIS Member as of January 2014 and NHIS Members Continuously Enrolled for 12 Months -- Figure 5.2 NHIS Membership Attrition, January 2014-January 2015 -- Figure 5.3 Proportion of NHIS Members Continuously Enrolled for 12 Months in 2014, by Age Group -- Figure 5.4 Proportion of Members Utilizing Services in Volta, by Membership Renewal Tendency, 2014 -- Figure 5.5 Features of NHIS Claims Administration -- Figure 5.6 Share of Claims with Incomplete Information, by Facility Type and Ownership, Volta, 2014 -- Tables -- Table 1.1 Data Sources -- Table 2.1 Health Outcome Indicators in Ghana, 1960-2013 -- Table 2.2 Coverage of Essential Services, 2003-14 -- Table 2.3 Health Care Facilities, by Type -- Table 3.1 Tariff Rates for Selected DRGs, by Facility Type -- Table 4.1 Changes in the Total Claims Expenditures, by Component -- Table 4.2 Simulated Savings from Redistributing Outpatient Claims Expenditures -- Table 5.1 Labor Requirements Simulation for Processing One Month's NHIS Claims.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1117-2
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1118-0
    Language: English
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  • 8
    UID:
    edocfu_9958264313302883
    Format: 1 online resource (68 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Series Statement: World Bank Studies
    Content: Ghana National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was established in 2003 as a major vehicle to achieve the country's commitment of Universal Health Coverage. The government has earmarked value-added tax to finance NHIS in addition to deduction from Social Security Trust (SSNIT) and premium payment. However, the scheme has been running under deficit since 2009 due to expansion of coverage, increase in service use, and surge in expenditure. Consequently, Ghana National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) had to reduce investment fund, borrow loans and delay claims reimbursement to providers in order to fill the gap. This study aimed to provide policy recommendations on how to improve efficiency and financial sustainability of NHIS based on health sector expenditure and NHIS claims expenditure review. The analysis started with an overall health sector expenditure review, zoomed into NHIS claims expenditure in Volta region as a miniature for the scheme, and followed by identifictation of factors affecting level and efficiency of expenditure. This study is the first attempt to undertake systematic in-depth analysis of NHIS claims expenditure. Based on the study findings, it is recommended that NHIS establish a stronger expenditure control system in place for long-term sustainability. The majority of NHIS claims expenditure is for outpatient consultations, district hospitals and above, certain member groups (e.g., informal group, members with more than five visits in a year). These distribution patterns are closely related to NHIS design features that encourages expenditure surge. For example, year-round open registration boosted adverse selection during enrollment, essentially fee-for-service provider mechanisms incentivized oversupply but not better quality and cost-effectiveness, and zero patient cost-sharing by patients reduced prudence in seeking care and caused overuse. Moreover, NHIA is not equipped to control expenditure or monitor effect of cost-containment policies. The claims processing system is mostly manual and does not collect information on service delivery and results. No mechanisms exist to monitor and correct providers' abonormal behaviors, as well as engage NHIS members for and engaging members for information verification, case management and prevention.
    Note: Front Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Background -- Objective -- Methodology and Data -- Organization of the Book -- Notes -- Chapter 2 The Country Context and Key Features of the Ghanaian Health Sector -- Country Context -- Health Outcomes -- Health Services -- Health Service Delivery System -- Health Financing System -- Notes -- Chapter 3 NHIS Overview -- Basic Features -- NHIS's Role in Health Care Financing -- Notes -- Chapter 4 NHIS Claims-Expenditure Review -- Trends in NHIS Claims Expenditures over Time -- Overview of Claims Expenditures in the Volta Region -- Claims Expenditure Distribution and Variation, by Provider -- Claims Expenditure Distribution and Variation, by Member Characteristics -- Examples of Potential Cost Saving Areas -- Summary -- Note -- Chapter 5 Factors Affecting Level and Efficiency of Claims Expenditures -- Behaviors of Service Providers and NHIS Members -- NHIA Internal Management -- Chapter 6 Designing Policies for Efficient Spending -- Recommendations -- Areas for Further Analytical Work -- Boxes -- Box 3.1 NHIS Exclusions -- Box 3.2 NHIA Accreditation Criteria -- Box 5.1 Key Formatting Issues for NHIS Claims Data -- Figures -- Figure 1.1 Development Indicators and Health Statistics in the Volta Region -- Figure 2.1 Equity in Health Outcomes, 2003-14 -- Figure 2.2 Ghana's Global Rank on Key Economic and Health Indicators, 1990-2013 -- Figure 2.3 Coverage of Essential Services, by Wealth Quintiles, 2003-14 -- Figure 2.4 Health Care Facilities, by Ownership -- Figure 2.5 Number of Health Workers per 1,000 People, by Region, 2016 -- Figure 2.6 The Flow of Funds in the Ghanaian Health Sector -- Figure 2.7 Per Capita Total Health Spending, 2005-12 -- Figure 2.8 Financing Sources of Total Health Expenditure, 2005-12. , Figure 3.1 NHIS Revenue Composition, 2005-14 -- Figure 3.2 NHIS Expenditure Composition, 2014 -- Figure 3.3 NHIS Membership Composition, 2014 -- Figure 3.4 NHIS Coverage, by Wealth Quintiles, 2008-14 -- Figure 3.5 NHIA Claims-Processing Flowchart -- Figure 3.6 Knowledge of NHIS Enrollment Features among NHIS Members -- Figure 3.7 Knowledge of NHIS Benefits among NHIS Members -- Figure 3.8 Public Health Financing, by Mechanism, 2014 -- Figure 3.9 Spending on MoH and NHIS as a Share of Total Public Spending, 2010-14 -- Figure 3.10 Public Spending on Goods and Services, by Recipient, 2012-15 -- Figure 4.1 NHIS Revenues and Expenditures, 2005-14 -- Figure 4.2 NHIS Balance and Changes in Investment Fund Assets -- Figure 4.3 NHIS Loan Balance and Interest Payments -- Figure 4.4 Claims Expenditures, by Service Type, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.5 Claims Expenditures, by GDRG, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.6 Distribution of Claims Expenditures, by Facility Type, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.7 Distribution of Claims Expenditures, by Facility Ownership, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.8 Per-Claim Expenditures, by Facility Type and Ownership, Outpatient Services -- Figure 4.9 Per-Claim Expenditures, by Facility Type and Ownership, Inpatient Services -- Figure 4.10 Per-Claim Expenditure on Outpatient Services among Primary Hospitals -- Figure 4.11 Per-Claim Expenditures on Inpatient Services among Primary Hospitals -- Figure 4.12 Benefit Incidence, by Membership Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.13 NHIS Members and Claims Expenditures, by Number of Outpatient Visits, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.14 NHIS Members and Claims Expenditures, by Number of Inpatient Admissions, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.15 Per-User Expenditures on Outpatient Services, by Age Group, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.16 Per-User Expenditures on Inpatient Services, by Age group, Volta, 2014. , Figure 4.17 Per-User Expenditure on Outpatient Services, by Member Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 4.18 Per-User Expenditure on Inpatient Services, by Member Category, Volta, 2014 -- Figure 5.1 Age Group Composition of Population Census, NHIS Member as of January 2014 and NHIS Members Continuously Enrolled for 12 Months -- Figure 5.2 NHIS Membership Attrition, January 2014-January 2015 -- Figure 5.3 Proportion of NHIS Members Continuously Enrolled for 12 Months in 2014, by Age Group -- Figure 5.4 Proportion of Members Utilizing Services in Volta, by Membership Renewal Tendency, 2014 -- Figure 5.5 Features of NHIS Claims Administration -- Figure 5.6 Share of Claims with Incomplete Information, by Facility Type and Ownership, Volta, 2014 -- Tables -- Table 1.1 Data Sources -- Table 2.1 Health Outcome Indicators in Ghana, 1960-2013 -- Table 2.2 Coverage of Essential Services, 2003-14 -- Table 2.3 Health Care Facilities, by Type -- Table 3.1 Tariff Rates for Selected DRGs, by Facility Type -- Table 4.1 Changes in the Total Claims Expenditures, by Component -- Table 4.2 Simulated Savings from Redistributing Outpatient Claims Expenditures -- Table 5.1 Labor Requirements Simulation for Processing One Month's NHIS Claims.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1117-2
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-4648-1118-0
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam ; : John Benjamins Pub. Co.,
    UID:
    edocfu_9959243180602883
    Format: viii, 318 p. : , ill.
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-282-15208-4 , 9786612152085 , 90-272-9141-1
    Series Statement: Pragmatics & beyond ; 176
    Content: Did earlier speakers of English use the same speech acts that we use today? Did they use them in the same way? How did they signal speech act values and how did they negotiate them in case of uncertainty? These are some of the questions that are addressed in this volume in innovative case studies that cover a wide range of speech acts from Old English to Present-day English. All the studies offer careful discussions of methodological and theoretical issues as well as detailed descriptions of specific speech acts. The first part of the volume is devoted to directives and commissives, i.e. speech acts such as requests, commands and promises. The second part is devoted to expressives and assertives and deals with speech acts such as greetings, compliments and apologies. The third part, finally, contains technical reports that deal primarily with the problem of extracting speech acts from historical corpora.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Speech Acts in the History of English -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Speech acts now and then -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Previous research on the history of speech acts -- 3. Key issues in historical linguistics and historical pragmatics -- 3.1 Language universals -- 3.2 Context -- 4. Pragmatic space -- 5. Speech acts and politeness -- 6. Research methods and research questions -- 7. The papers in this volume -- References -- Directives and commissives -- Directives in Old English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Methodology and data -- 3. Old English directives: Four case studies -- 3.1 Directive performatives -- 3.2 Constructions with þu scealt / ge sculon -- Table 1. þu scealt-constructions in directives in the Old English section of the Helsinki Corpus. -- Table 2. ge sculon-constructions in directives in the Old English section of the Helsinki Corpus. -- 3.3 Constructions with uton -- Table 3. uton-constructions in directives in the Old English section of the Helsinki Corpus. -- 3.4 Constructions with neodþearf -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- Requests and directness in Early Modern English trial proceedings and play texts, 1640-1760 -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Requests -- 2.1 Towards a definition of the speech act of request -- 2.2 The structure of requests: A starting point -- 2.2.1 Distinguishing the structural categories of a request -- 2.2.2 Features of the head act -- 3. (In)directness and requests -- 3.1 (In)directness: Some theoretical background -- 3.2 Classifying requests for (in)directness: A starting point -- 4. Historical methodology: Problems, solutions and implications -- 5. Our data and its sociopragmatic annotation -- 6. Requests and directness: Patterns of distribution in the Sociopragmatic Corpus (trials and plays, -- 6.1 Overall distribution. , Table 1. Frequencies of requests in the SPC -- 6.2 The distribution of broad categories of directness -- Table 2. Frequencies of types of request in the SPC -- Figure 1 and 2. The distribution of conventional indirectness in the CCSARP project (Figure 1, from -- 7. Specific strategies for conventional indirect requests and their distribution -- 8. Impositive strategies and their context -- Table 3. Impositive strategies -- Table 4. The frequencies of support moves in impositive requests -- Table 5. The frequencies of types of support move in drama and trials -- 9. Summary and discussion of major findings -- 10. Concluding remarks -- References -- An inventory of directives in Shakespeare's King Lear -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Forms and functions -- 2.1 The Early Modern inventory of imperatives and related speech forms to express directives -- 2.2 Directive speech acts - a working definition -- 2.3 Directive speech acts and their illocutionary force -- 2.4 The communicative functions and the manipulative strength of imperative clauses -- 2.5 Indirect speech acts -- 3. Shakespearean directives - methodological problems -- 4. Corpus study: King Lear's directive speech acts -- 4.1 Analysis of King Lear Act I -- 4.1.1 Scene 1 "The state division scene" (1.1.34-266) -- 4.1.2 Act I, Scene 4 "Lear and his fool" (105-117 -- 163-181) -- 4.1.3 Act I, scene 4: "Lear and Goneril" (236-278) -- 4.1.4 Summary -- 4.2. Analysis of Act II -- 4.2.1 Scene 4 "Lear and Regan" (88-119 -- 133-182 -- 188-271) -- 4.2.2 Summary -- 4.3 Analysis of Act III -- 4.3.1 Scene 2 "Storm on the Heath" (1-78) -- 4.3.2 Act III, Scene 4 "Storm still" (1-28 -- 170-180) -- 4.3.3 Summary -- 4.4 Analysis of Act IV -- 4.4.1 Scene 6 "Lear [still mad] and Gloucester" (130-180) -- 4.4.2 Act IV, Scene 7 "Lear and Cordelia" (25-83) -- 4.4.3 Summary -- 4.5 Analysis of Act V. , 4.5.1 Scene 3 "Lear and Cordelia" (8-11 -- 306-12) -- 5. Summary and conclusion -- Sources -- References -- Two polite speech acts from a diachronic perspective -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Data and methodology -- 3. Analysis and discussion of findings: Form and function of requesting and undertaking commitments -- 4. Concluding observations -- References -- No botmeles bihestes -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Method and material -- 3. Speech acts and their linguistic realisations in history -- 4. Promises as speech acts -- 5. The "binding promise" in the medieval period -- 6. The "magic words" - different ways of making a commitment -- 7. The texts studied -- 8. The magic words in use -- 9. Summary of ways of promising and eliciting promises -- References -- Expressives and assertives -- Hāl, Hail, Hello, Hi -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. The chronological development of greeting terms -- 3. Iconemes and etymologies: Where do greetings come from? -- 3.1 Expressive phrases, attention-getters -- 3.2 Phrases with a performative verb -- 3.3 Wish for a good time of the day -- 3.4 Wish for God's protection -- 3.5 Wish for peace -- 3.6 Wish for well-being -- 3.7 Inquiry about well-being -- 3.8 Sign of subversiveness -- 3.9 Happy about seeing each other -- 3.10 Loan expressions -- 4. Formal and functional developments: Where do greetings go? -- 4.1 Functional changes -- 4.2 Discursive changes -- 4.3 Morphonetic changes -- 4.4 Morphosyntactic changes and anomalies -- 4.5 Morphosyntactic conservation -- 4.6 Stylistic changes and conservations -- 4.7 The need for innovation -- 5. Conclusions -- "Methinks you seem more beautiful than ever" -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Face-threatening and face-enhancing acts -- 3. Present-day compliments -- 4. Compliments in the past -- 5. Methodologies of compliment research -- 6. Locating compliments in historical materials. , 7. Two examples in their sociohistorical context -- 8. Fiction as data -- 9. Gender differences in early fiction corpora -- 9.1 Female authors' compliments -- 9.2 Male authors' compliments -- 10. Discussion and conclusion -- Corpora -- References -- Apologies in the history of English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Apology as a speech act: Criteria for comparison -- 3. Contrastive versus historical speech act analysis -- 4. Apology as a speech act in Present-day and Renaissance English -- 5. Data -- 6. Negotiations of interpersonal relations: Typical manifestations of apologies in our data -- 7. Forms of apologies in Renaissance prose fiction and prose drama -- 8. Functions of apologies: Types of offences -- 9. Addressee- and speaker-oriented apologies -- 10. Conclusion -- Methods of speech act retrieval -- Showing a little promise -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Aim and method -- 3. Corpus-based studies of speech acts -- 4. The corpus data -- 5. Identifying prototypical promises -- 6. Results and analysis -- Figure 1. Performative verb frequencies in the testing data -- Table 1. Performative verb frequencies in the training data -- Table 2. Performative verb frequencies in the testing data -- Figure 2. Performative verb frequencies by author -- Figure 3. Pattern frequencies in the testing data -- Figure 4. Pattern frequencies by performative verb -- 7. Retrieval software performance -- Table 3. Precision and recall rates for performative verbs -- Table 4. Precision and recall rates for query patterns -- 8. Conclusions -- References -- Appendix A: Penn Treebank part-of-speech tagset -- Fishing for compliments -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Methodological challenges -- 3. Points of departure -- 3.1 Definitions of compliments -- 3.2 Method: Combining quantitative and qualitative assessment -- 3.3 Inter-annotator agreement -- 4. Assessment of the patterns -- 4.1 Pattern 1. , 4.2 Pattern 2 -- 4.3 Pattern 3 -- 4.4 Pattern 4 -- 4.5 Pattern 5 -- 4.6 Pattern 6 -- 4.7 Pattern 7 -- 4.8 Pattern 8 -- 4.9 Pattern 9 -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1 Query problems -- Table 1. Compliment pattern frequencies in Manes and Wolfson's data and in the BNC -- Figure 1. Compliment pattern frequencies in the BNC graphically compared to Manes and Wolfson's (M& -- W -- 5.2 Precision and recall revisited -- Table 2. Frequencies of compliment patterns in BNC, manual assessment -- 6. Conclusions -- References -- Tracing directives through text and time -- 1. Introduction -- 2. A genre-based bottom-up methodology: The basic steps -- 3. A study of directives -- 3.1 The data -- 3.2 Manifestations of directives -- 3.3 Results: Variability and retrievability -- Figure 1. Distribution of manifestations of directives in the data (in per cent) -- 3.4 Results: Distribution across genres -- Figure 2. Frequency of directives in sermons, letters and prayers (freq. per 1,000 words) -- Figure 3. Distribution of manifestations of directives in sermons (in per cent) -- Figure 4. Distribution of manifestations of directives in letters (in per cent) -- Figure 5. Distribution of manifestations of directives in prayers (in per cent) -- 3.5 Extending the analysis -- Table 1. Directives with let us / let's in the Early Modern part of the Helsinki Corpus (frequency p -- Figure 6. Frequency of directive performatives in sermons, letters and prayers (freq. per 10,000 wor -- 4. Conclusions -- Sources -- References -- Name index -- Subject index -- The Pragmatics & -- Beyond New Series. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-5420-6
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam ; : John Benjamins Pub. Co.,
    UID:
    almafu_9959243180602883
    Format: viii, 318 p. : , ill.
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-282-15208-4 , 9786612152085 , 90-272-9141-1
    Series Statement: Pragmatics & beyond ; 176
    Content: Did earlier speakers of English use the same speech acts that we use today? Did they use them in the same way? How did they signal speech act values and how did they negotiate them in case of uncertainty? These are some of the questions that are addressed in this volume in innovative case studies that cover a wide range of speech acts from Old English to Present-day English. All the studies offer careful discussions of methodological and theoretical issues as well as detailed descriptions of specific speech acts. The first part of the volume is devoted to directives and commissives, i.e. speech acts such as requests, commands and promises. The second part is devoted to expressives and assertives and deals with speech acts such as greetings, compliments and apologies. The third part, finally, contains technical reports that deal primarily with the problem of extracting speech acts from historical corpora.
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Speech Acts in the History of English -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface -- Speech acts now and then -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Previous research on the history of speech acts -- 3. Key issues in historical linguistics and historical pragmatics -- 3.1 Language universals -- 3.2 Context -- 4. Pragmatic space -- 5. Speech acts and politeness -- 6. Research methods and research questions -- 7. The papers in this volume -- References -- Directives and commissives -- Directives in Old English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Methodology and data -- 3. Old English directives: Four case studies -- 3.1 Directive performatives -- 3.2 Constructions with þu scealt / ge sculon -- Table 1. þu scealt-constructions in directives in the Old English section of the Helsinki Corpus. -- Table 2. ge sculon-constructions in directives in the Old English section of the Helsinki Corpus. -- 3.3 Constructions with uton -- Table 3. uton-constructions in directives in the Old English section of the Helsinki Corpus. -- 3.4 Constructions with neodþearf -- 4. Conclusions -- References -- Requests and directness in Early Modern English trial proceedings and play texts, 1640-1760 -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Requests -- 2.1 Towards a definition of the speech act of request -- 2.2 The structure of requests: A starting point -- 2.2.1 Distinguishing the structural categories of a request -- 2.2.2 Features of the head act -- 3. (In)directness and requests -- 3.1 (In)directness: Some theoretical background -- 3.2 Classifying requests for (in)directness: A starting point -- 4. Historical methodology: Problems, solutions and implications -- 5. Our data and its sociopragmatic annotation -- 6. Requests and directness: Patterns of distribution in the Sociopragmatic Corpus (trials and plays, -- 6.1 Overall distribution. , Table 1. Frequencies of requests in the SPC -- 6.2 The distribution of broad categories of directness -- Table 2. Frequencies of types of request in the SPC -- Figure 1 and 2. The distribution of conventional indirectness in the CCSARP project (Figure 1, from -- 7. Specific strategies for conventional indirect requests and their distribution -- 8. Impositive strategies and their context -- Table 3. Impositive strategies -- Table 4. The frequencies of support moves in impositive requests -- Table 5. The frequencies of types of support move in drama and trials -- 9. Summary and discussion of major findings -- 10. Concluding remarks -- References -- An inventory of directives in Shakespeare's King Lear -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Forms and functions -- 2.1 The Early Modern inventory of imperatives and related speech forms to express directives -- 2.2 Directive speech acts - a working definition -- 2.3 Directive speech acts and their illocutionary force -- 2.4 The communicative functions and the manipulative strength of imperative clauses -- 2.5 Indirect speech acts -- 3. Shakespearean directives - methodological problems -- 4. Corpus study: King Lear's directive speech acts -- 4.1 Analysis of King Lear Act I -- 4.1.1 Scene 1 "The state division scene" (1.1.34-266) -- 4.1.2 Act I, Scene 4 "Lear and his fool" (105-117 -- 163-181) -- 4.1.3 Act I, scene 4: "Lear and Goneril" (236-278) -- 4.1.4 Summary -- 4.2. Analysis of Act II -- 4.2.1 Scene 4 "Lear and Regan" (88-119 -- 133-182 -- 188-271) -- 4.2.2 Summary -- 4.3 Analysis of Act III -- 4.3.1 Scene 2 "Storm on the Heath" (1-78) -- 4.3.2 Act III, Scene 4 "Storm still" (1-28 -- 170-180) -- 4.3.3 Summary -- 4.4 Analysis of Act IV -- 4.4.1 Scene 6 "Lear [still mad] and Gloucester" (130-180) -- 4.4.2 Act IV, Scene 7 "Lear and Cordelia" (25-83) -- 4.4.3 Summary -- 4.5 Analysis of Act V. , 4.5.1 Scene 3 "Lear and Cordelia" (8-11 -- 306-12) -- 5. Summary and conclusion -- Sources -- References -- Two polite speech acts from a diachronic perspective -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Data and methodology -- 3. Analysis and discussion of findings: Form and function of requesting and undertaking commitments -- 4. Concluding observations -- References -- No botmeles bihestes -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Method and material -- 3. Speech acts and their linguistic realisations in history -- 4. Promises as speech acts -- 5. The "binding promise" in the medieval period -- 6. The "magic words" - different ways of making a commitment -- 7. The texts studied -- 8. The magic words in use -- 9. Summary of ways of promising and eliciting promises -- References -- Expressives and assertives -- Hāl, Hail, Hello, Hi -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. The chronological development of greeting terms -- 3. Iconemes and etymologies: Where do greetings come from? -- 3.1 Expressive phrases, attention-getters -- 3.2 Phrases with a performative verb -- 3.3 Wish for a good time of the day -- 3.4 Wish for God's protection -- 3.5 Wish for peace -- 3.6 Wish for well-being -- 3.7 Inquiry about well-being -- 3.8 Sign of subversiveness -- 3.9 Happy about seeing each other -- 3.10 Loan expressions -- 4. Formal and functional developments: Where do greetings go? -- 4.1 Functional changes -- 4.2 Discursive changes -- 4.3 Morphonetic changes -- 4.4 Morphosyntactic changes and anomalies -- 4.5 Morphosyntactic conservation -- 4.6 Stylistic changes and conservations -- 4.7 The need for innovation -- 5. Conclusions -- "Methinks you seem more beautiful than ever" -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Face-threatening and face-enhancing acts -- 3. Present-day compliments -- 4. Compliments in the past -- 5. Methodologies of compliment research -- 6. Locating compliments in historical materials. , 7. Two examples in their sociohistorical context -- 8. Fiction as data -- 9. Gender differences in early fiction corpora -- 9.1 Female authors' compliments -- 9.2 Male authors' compliments -- 10. Discussion and conclusion -- Corpora -- References -- Apologies in the history of English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Apology as a speech act: Criteria for comparison -- 3. Contrastive versus historical speech act analysis -- 4. Apology as a speech act in Present-day and Renaissance English -- 5. Data -- 6. Negotiations of interpersonal relations: Typical manifestations of apologies in our data -- 7. Forms of apologies in Renaissance prose fiction and prose drama -- 8. Functions of apologies: Types of offences -- 9. Addressee- and speaker-oriented apologies -- 10. Conclusion -- Methods of speech act retrieval -- Showing a little promise -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Aim and method -- 3. Corpus-based studies of speech acts -- 4. The corpus data -- 5. Identifying prototypical promises -- 6. Results and analysis -- Figure 1. Performative verb frequencies in the testing data -- Table 1. Performative verb frequencies in the training data -- Table 2. Performative verb frequencies in the testing data -- Figure 2. Performative verb frequencies by author -- Figure 3. Pattern frequencies in the testing data -- Figure 4. Pattern frequencies by performative verb -- 7. Retrieval software performance -- Table 3. Precision and recall rates for performative verbs -- Table 4. Precision and recall rates for query patterns -- 8. Conclusions -- References -- Appendix A: Penn Treebank part-of-speech tagset -- Fishing for compliments -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Methodological challenges -- 3. Points of departure -- 3.1 Definitions of compliments -- 3.2 Method: Combining quantitative and qualitative assessment -- 3.3 Inter-annotator agreement -- 4. Assessment of the patterns -- 4.1 Pattern 1. , 4.2 Pattern 2 -- 4.3 Pattern 3 -- 4.4 Pattern 4 -- 4.5 Pattern 5 -- 4.6 Pattern 6 -- 4.7 Pattern 7 -- 4.8 Pattern 8 -- 4.9 Pattern 9 -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1 Query problems -- Table 1. Compliment pattern frequencies in Manes and Wolfson's data and in the BNC -- Figure 1. Compliment pattern frequencies in the BNC graphically compared to Manes and Wolfson's (M& -- W -- 5.2 Precision and recall revisited -- Table 2. Frequencies of compliment patterns in BNC, manual assessment -- 6. Conclusions -- References -- Tracing directives through text and time -- 1. Introduction -- 2. A genre-based bottom-up methodology: The basic steps -- 3. A study of directives -- 3.1 The data -- 3.2 Manifestations of directives -- 3.3 Results: Variability and retrievability -- Figure 1. Distribution of manifestations of directives in the data (in per cent) -- 3.4 Results: Distribution across genres -- Figure 2. Frequency of directives in sermons, letters and prayers (freq. per 1,000 words) -- Figure 3. Distribution of manifestations of directives in sermons (in per cent) -- Figure 4. Distribution of manifestations of directives in letters (in per cent) -- Figure 5. Distribution of manifestations of directives in prayers (in per cent) -- 3.5 Extending the analysis -- Table 1. Directives with let us / let's in the Early Modern part of the Helsinki Corpus (frequency p -- Figure 6. Frequency of directive performatives in sermons, letters and prayers (freq. per 10,000 wor -- 4. Conclusions -- Sources -- References -- Name index -- Subject index -- The Pragmatics & -- Beyond New Series. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-5420-6
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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