15 research outputs found

    Health-industry linkages for local health: reframing policies for African health system strengthening

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    The benefits of local production of pharmaceuticals in Africa for local access to medicines and to effective treatment remain contested. There is scepticism among health systems experts internationally that production of pharmaceuticals in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) can provide competitive prices, quality and reliability of supply. Meanwhile low-income African populations continue to suffer poor access to a broad range of medicines, despite major international funding efforts. A current wave of pharmaceutical industry investment in SSA is associated with active African government promotion of pharmaceuticals as a key sector in industrialization strategies. We present evidence from interviews in 2013–15 and 2017 in East Africa that health system actors perceive these investments in local production as an opportunity to improve access to medicines and supplies. We then identify key policies that can ensure that local health systems benefit from the investments. We argue for a ‘local health’ policy perspective, framed by concepts of proximity and positionality, which works with local priorities and distinct policy time scales and identifies scope for incentive alignment to generate mutually beneficial health–industry linkages and strengthening of both sectors. We argue that this local health perspective represents a distinctive shift in policy framing: it is not necessarily in conflict with ‘global health’ frameworks but poses a challenge to some of its underlying assumptions

    Industrial development in Tanzania : some critical issues

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    This study deals with some aspects of industrial development in Tanzania in the two last decades which the authors consider to be especially important. They adress mainly three groups of issues. First, choice and transfer of technology, technology policy, and the problems and implications of economies of scale. Second, the effects of foreign aid on industrial development in Tanzania. And third, the role of agriculture in industrial development. There is also a historical analysis of industrial development since independence and a critical assessment of the basic industry strategy (BIS) which was adopted as Tanzania's official industrialization strategy in 1975.Contents: PART 1: Historical background and strategies -- 1. Historical analysis of industrial development in Tanzania since independence -- 2. The basic industry strategy: presentation and interpretation -- PART 2: The basic industry strategy: problems and limitations -- 3. Choice of technology, transfer of technology and technology policy -- 4. Problems of economics of scale in industrial development -- 5. On the issue of linkages and sequencing in the basic industries strategy -- PART 3: Development through foreign aid or through internal mechanisms? -- 6. Foreign aid and economic growth in the 1970s with special reference to the manufacturing sector -- 7. The role of agriculture in industrial development -- 8. Summary and conclusions </p

    Labour and poverty in rural Tanzania: Ujamaa and rural development in the United Republic of Tanzania

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    Assesses Tanzania's experience in rural development. Analysis is based on the results of the household and village survey conducted by the International Labour Office and the Department of Economics at Dar es Salaam University in 1980, covering a randomly chosen sample of 600 households in 20 villages in 8 regions. Begins with a review of rural development issues and policies and identifies and measures inequality, showing its extent both within and among villages. Describes the household and village surveys, presents a profile of the village household and the village community, and discusses peasant differentiation. Investigates the impact of government programs such as cooperative farms, land reform, education, and health services. Concludes that reform of the agrarian economy is the key to coping with the present development problems. Collier is a Fellow of Keble College, Oxford University; Radwan is Senior Economist with the International Labour Organization's World Employment Programme; and Wangwe is Dean of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Index
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