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Library Uganda Systematic Country Diagnostic

Uganda Systematic Country Diagnostic

Uganda Systematic Country Diagnostic

Resource information

Date of publication
december 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/23500

After a destructive civil war and
extreme political instability, Uganda began its
reconstruction process in 1987. Within the enabling
environment of macroeconomic stability, most of the progress
on the twin goals was attributable to higher agricultural
incomes. Poverty reduction among households primarily
engaged in agriculture accounted for 53 percent of the
reduction in poverty from 2006 to 2010 and 77 percent of the
reduction in poverty from 2010 to 2013. Despite significant
progress on the twin goals, vulnerability to poverty in
Uganda is high and the sparse social safety nets and limited
access to finance have provided little protection. Change in
economic and social policies is required to prevent a
slowdown in poverty reduction and an increase in
vulnerability. In this context, a comprehensive framework
based on the three interrelated blocks of growth, inclusion,
and sustainability has been used to identify the challenges
to and opportunities for ending poverty and boosting shared
prosperity. The first block emphasizes the development of a
competitive and resilient private sector to lead the growth
process by adequately capitalizing on all the available
opportunities. The second block, complementary to the first
one, reinforces the need to ensure a fair distribution of
the growth dividend across all Ugandans, especially those
living in the north and the east, by providing them with
access to social and infrastructure services so that they
can increase their productive capacity and income generating
opportunities. The third block emphasizes the need to
undertake the inclusive growth process in a fiscally,
socially, and environmentally sustainable manner.

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