After months of wrangling, arrangements to deploy over 260 Australian police and officials to Papua New Guinea have finally been made. Helen Hughes argues that Papua New Guinea, in addition to restoring law and order, needs to implement economic reforms to put it on a growth path of 7 per cent a year. This report identifies the principal problems that face Papua New Guinea and outlines a reform agenda that would lead the country out of stagnation
This paper argues for improved policy choices for growth of incomes as the priority for a reform-min...
Papua New Guinea's diverse problems of order are symptomatic of the dislocative impact of broader pr...
Economic reforms geared towards alleviating the liquidity crisis and achieving structural reform to ...
The deep divide between the tiny elite minority in Papua New Guinea who enrich themselves at the exp...
This paper discusses the reforms that are essential to putting Papua New Guinea on the road to highe...
After a surge of growth from 1990 to 1994, the Papua New Guinea economy regressed. The 1994 crisis, ...
Papua New Guinea no longer necessarily needs to identify itself as falling within an uncontested Aus...
The military mood is buoyant in Papua New Guinea, but its security problems are fundamentally develo...
Although Papua New Guinea is a 'small state' it increasingly defies traditional predictions about it...
Papua New Guinea is showing every sign of economic paralysis, governmental collapse and social despa...
Papua New Guinea has had a very eventful year in 1997. It has had a constitutional crisis involving ...
Since the late 1980s, a succession of Australianfunded programs has sought to strengthen the Royal P...
This paper suggests that Papua New Guinea's national income would grow much more rapidly if its...
Papua New Guinea (PNG) is a small nation by international standards but dominates the Pacific Island...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Rosita MacDonald examines the...
This paper argues for improved policy choices for growth of incomes as the priority for a reform-min...
Papua New Guinea's diverse problems of order are symptomatic of the dislocative impact of broader pr...
Economic reforms geared towards alleviating the liquidity crisis and achieving structural reform to ...
The deep divide between the tiny elite minority in Papua New Guinea who enrich themselves at the exp...
This paper discusses the reforms that are essential to putting Papua New Guinea on the road to highe...
After a surge of growth from 1990 to 1994, the Papua New Guinea economy regressed. The 1994 crisis, ...
Papua New Guinea no longer necessarily needs to identify itself as falling within an uncontested Aus...
The military mood is buoyant in Papua New Guinea, but its security problems are fundamentally develo...
Although Papua New Guinea is a 'small state' it increasingly defies traditional predictions about it...
Papua New Guinea is showing every sign of economic paralysis, governmental collapse and social despa...
Papua New Guinea has had a very eventful year in 1997. It has had a constitutional crisis involving ...
Since the late 1980s, a succession of Australianfunded programs has sought to strengthen the Royal P...
This paper suggests that Papua New Guinea's national income would grow much more rapidly if its...
Papua New Guinea (PNG) is a small nation by international standards but dominates the Pacific Island...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Rosita MacDonald examines the...
This paper argues for improved policy choices for growth of incomes as the priority for a reform-min...
Papua New Guinea's diverse problems of order are symptomatic of the dislocative impact of broader pr...
Economic reforms geared towards alleviating the liquidity crisis and achieving structural reform to ...