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DocumentInvestment and Resource Mobilisation: Sources and Uses of Financial Resources
Thematic Overview. EASYPol Module 145
2008Also available in:
No results found.This document offers a syllabus for one component learning module in the FAO sponsored knowledge sharing series which deals with investment and resource mobilization in the rural economic space. This document outlines basic concepts and provides a framework for thinking about the sources and uses of financial resources which rural economies require for growth. This module both reviews recent developments in this topical area and suggests some new approaches to securing additional sources for fu nding rural investment. The module relies heavily on recent seminal studies which treat the topics briefly covered here in exhaustive detail1. Additional reference documents are listed in the annex. -
DocumentRisk Mitigation and Management for Agricultural Investment : Investment and Resource Mobilization
Applied Material. EASYPol Module 155
2008Also available in:
No results found.The incidence of risk in agriculture is important to policy makers at national and international levels. Fluctuations in producer incomes, and particularly the threat of catastrophic loss, may present difficult welfare problems for these same producers, their governments, and the international community. Trading losses at the level of market intermediaries, such as traders and processors, negatively impact the development of sustainable trading and finance activities in the commodity sectors. In more extreme cases, international humanitarian assistance may be necessary, but that assistance may destabilize markets, create dependencies, or bias management via expectations of future disaster relief. -
DocumentRuralInvest Module 2 - Preparing and using project profiles
A participatory approach to identifying and preparing small scale rural investments
2007In recent years, locally designed and managed investment projects have assumed increasing importance as effective tools for sustainable rural development. Supporting local communities to conceive and implement their own projects – whether for income generating activities or for social investments – not only ensures greater ownership and commitment to those projects, but also strengthens the capacity of communities to contribute to and manage their own development. However, the incr easing adoption of this approach by national governments, international financing agencies and rural banks has also highlighted the critical importance of providing adequate support and guidance to national technicians working with communities and other groups in identifying investment needs, defining potential projects, and developing them for external financing. RuralInvest answers this need by offering a series of modules, developed over a number of years and tested extensivel y in the field, which provide such support through a range of materials and training courses, and include technical manuals, custom developed software and instructors’ guides.
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