21 resultados para Transportation.
em Comissão Econômica para a América Latina e o Caribe (CEPAL)
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Includes bibliography
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Contiene los antecedentes del Grupo Especial de Trabajo sobre Planificacion del Transporte y el mandato, acordado por los Ministros en la Quinta Sesion del CDCC, sobre el desarrollo de un programa en el sector transporte, en especial transporte maritimo, en base a recomendaciones hechas en estudios anteriores.
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Extrae del informe de consultor "An agenda for transport planning in the Caribbean" las sugerencias para el futuro programa de trabajo en relacion a las areas de actividad, modalidades para la implementacion del programa, aspectos financieros, y creacion de una Unidad de Investigacion de Transporte Multimodal.
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Informe de la reunion del Grupo de Trabajo sobre Planificacion del Transporte cuyo debate se centro en las prioridades para el futuro programa de trabajo del Grupo. Incluye lista de participantes y de documentos.
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Incluye Bibliografía
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Incluye Bibliografía
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Incluye Bibliografía
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Incluye Bibliografía
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The Third Western Hemisphere Transportation Ministerial meeting was held in New Orleans, Lousiana, United States, from 14 to 16 December 1998, under the theme Transportation in the 21st Century: A Vision for Integration. The meeting was attended by Ministers and heads of delegations from 33 countries of the Americas, representatives of various international organizations and business sector of the Continent. The current issue of the Bulletin provides the complete text of the Ministerial Declaration. For additional information, contact José María Rubiato: e-mail jrubiato@eclac.cl
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Academicians and practitioners generally agree that there is a positive correlation between more and better infrastructure and economic growth. From the broader perspective of development, attempts have been made in the literature to identify the different theoretical connections and the empirical patterns that link infrastructure to productivity, on the one hand, and those that link it to social inclusion and equity, on the other hand. Infrastructure contributes to development in different ways. The capital involved is not homogeneous, nor is its effect on the distributive aspects. Water and sanitation have a particularly strong association with the health of the general population and with infant mortality, early childhood health, learning abilities and the acquisition of labour skills. With respect to transportation, the reduction of costs and travel times has a direct economic impact on economic activities of production and domestic and international distribution. That infrastructure also has a social and distributive role to play by reducing the number of fatal accidents and serious injuries in the sectors that are naturally most susceptible to them, namely, the poor. Under the broad umbrella of infrastructure, we can include a number of facilities that make possible the provision of certain services. Some of these facilities require very significant fixed capital investments; some of them are residential, while others are not necessarily. What they all have in common is the existence of networks (transportation, wiring, pipelines) and a strong convergence of physical capital and/or technology, as well as the need for major investments in periodic maintenance.
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This issue of the FAL Bulletin covers training in the inland freight transportation and logistical operations sector in Latin America and its role in productivity and competitiveness.