Documents
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Guinea - a socioeconomic assessment of well-being and poverty [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] March 31, 1997
World Bank
World Bank Fiscal Year 1997 Guinea Poverty Assessment
Guinea: Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] July 17, 2002
World Bank
Prepared by the Government of Guinea
Guinea: Staff Assessment (JSA) of Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] August 23, 2002
Prepared by the staffs of the World Bank and IMF
Guinea: Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (I-PRSP) [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] October 30, 2000
Prepared by the Government of Guinea.
Guinea: Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (I-PRSP) in FRENCH [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] July 18, 2001
Prepared by the Government of Guinea.
Guinea: Joint Staff Assessment (JSA) of the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper Annual Progress Report [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] November 23, 2004
Prepared by the staffs of the World Bank and IMF.
Guinea: Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) Annual Progress Report [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] April 30, 2004
Prepared by the government of Guinea.
Guinea: Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) Progress Report [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] January 31, 2006
Republic of Guinea
Prepared by the government of Guinea
Independent Water and Sanitation Providers in African Cities [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] April 1, 2000
Bernard Collignon, and Marc Vezina
This ten-country study from Africa looks at how the small-scale provider sector responds to market niches and meets the needs of both the poor and other unserviced communities.
Public Spending on Health Care in Africa: Do the Poor Benefit? [get by e-mail]  [please enable JavaScript to use this feature] April 11, 2001
Florencia Castro-Leal, Julia Dayton, Lionel Demery, and Kalpana Mehra
A study of how much the poor and rich benefit from government health care expenditures in seven countries of sub-Saharan Africa.
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