The experience of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) in Africa is very different from that in the developed world. In the West, AIDS affects few people, and for those who are infected, it is an increasingly manageable illness. In Africa, huge numbers of people are being infected - mainly young adults through sexual intercourse. This is having a dramatic effect on key demographic indicators. Child mortality in some countries has doubled, while up to 25 years of life expectancy have been lost. The economic impact of AIDS is difficult to establish, but it is certainly leading to increased poverty in African families and communities. Development advances are being reversed, but the impact is incremental rather than catastrophic
With close to one adult in ten infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), compared with o...
This desk study was commissioned by NORAD to review recent literature on socio-economic consequences...
It is estimated that by 2001 20 million people had died from AIDS, which is now the world´s fourth b...
AIDS has the potential to create severe economic impacts in many African countries. It is different ...
Since its detection in the early 1980s, the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) has become a ...
The global Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) pandemic has had severe economic ramification...
Infectious diseases matter greatly for Africa. Cross-country regressions for the 1990-97 period sugg...
Although Africa is already entering its second decade with AIDS, the spread of HIV has not been stop...
AIDS is a human tragedy and a major health problem. The scale of the disease is so large that it now...
It is now 20 years since the first cases of acquired immune deficiency syn-drome (AIDS) were discove...
Because sub-Saharan African society is characterized by extended families, the horrendous effects of...
The wide-ranging impact of HIV/AIDS on demographic trends and socio-economic development of African ...
The paper reviews the state of knowledge on the demographic and socio-economic impacts of AIDS. It ...
In this paper, a simple general equilibrium model a la Solow is developed to capture the impact of A...
Most studies find that AIDS has a relatively weak impact on economic growth because they assume that...
With close to one adult in ten infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), compared with o...
This desk study was commissioned by NORAD to review recent literature on socio-economic consequences...
It is estimated that by 2001 20 million people had died from AIDS, which is now the world´s fourth b...
AIDS has the potential to create severe economic impacts in many African countries. It is different ...
Since its detection in the early 1980s, the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) has become a ...
The global Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) pandemic has had severe economic ramification...
Infectious diseases matter greatly for Africa. Cross-country regressions for the 1990-97 period sugg...
Although Africa is already entering its second decade with AIDS, the spread of HIV has not been stop...
AIDS is a human tragedy and a major health problem. The scale of the disease is so large that it now...
It is now 20 years since the first cases of acquired immune deficiency syn-drome (AIDS) were discove...
Because sub-Saharan African society is characterized by extended families, the horrendous effects of...
The wide-ranging impact of HIV/AIDS on demographic trends and socio-economic development of African ...
The paper reviews the state of knowledge on the demographic and socio-economic impacts of AIDS. It ...
In this paper, a simple general equilibrium model a la Solow is developed to capture the impact of A...
Most studies find that AIDS has a relatively weak impact on economic growth because they assume that...
With close to one adult in ten infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), compared with o...
This desk study was commissioned by NORAD to review recent literature on socio-economic consequences...
It is estimated that by 2001 20 million people had died from AIDS, which is now the world´s fourth b...