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The upcoming Canadian Society for International Health
(CSIH) November 6-9 Conference on Health in the Global
Economy looks at the impact of the neo-liberal agenda
on health. See: http://www.csih.org
As complementary (or background) reading for that focus
the International Labour Organization’s International
Labour Review ( Vol 144 (2005), No. 1) has published
an interesting and useful article entitled:
Circumventing marcroeconomic conservatism: A policy
framework for growth, employment and poverty reduction,
written by Iyanatul ISLAM.
The abstract of the article is as follows:
Conservative macroeconomic policy, as currently understood
and practiced in many developing countries, is preoccupied
with stability at the expense of growth and with fiscal
and inflation targets at the expense of employment. This
article argues that the empirical foundation of
macroeconomic conservatism is fragile and there is a case
for developing a viable alternative to current orthodoxy.
Such an alternative is consistent with the substance and
spirit of the ILO’s Decent Work Agenda that emphasizes
employment creation, comprehensive social protection,
and the strengthening of labour market institutions
through social dialogue and protection of labour rights.
The article is in the currently distributed edition
(vol 144, No. 1)of the International Labour Review.
It is available online via http://www.ilo.org and
engentaconnect.com, but only for a fee.
Sam Lanfranco
Distributed Knowledge
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