Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T07:30:32.602Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2024

Omar A. Guerrero
Affiliation:
The Alan Turing Institute, London
Gonzalo Castañeda
Affiliation:
Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
Complexity Economics and Sustainable Development
A Computational Framework for Policy Priority Inference
, pp. 370 - 389
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abadie, A. (2021). Using Synthetic Controls: Feasibility, Data Requirements, and Methodological Aspects. Journal of Economic Literature, 59(2):391425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ades, A. and Tella, R. (1997). The New Economics of Corruption: A Survey and Some New Results. Political Studies, 45(3):496515.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Agénor, P. and Neanidis, K. (2011). The Allocation of Public Expenditure and Economic Growth. The Manchester School, 79(4):899931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aikman, D., Chichkanov, P., Douglas, G., Georgiev, Y., Howat, J., and King, B. (2019). System-Wide Stress Simulation. Working Paper 809, Bank of England, London.Google Scholar
Akenroye, T., Nygård, H., and Eyo, A. (2018). Towards Implementation of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) in Developing Nations: A Useful Funding Framework. International Area Studies Review, 21(1):38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alcaraz, C., Chiquiar, D., and Salcedo, A. (2012). Remittances, Schooling, and Child Labor in Mexico. Journal of Development Economics, 97(1):156165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ali, A. and Isse, H. (2002). Determinants of Economic Corruption: A Cross-Country Comparison. Cato Journal, 22(3):449.Google Scholar
Alkire, S. (2002). Dimensions of Human Development. World Development, 30(2):181205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alkire, S. and Foster, J. (2011). Counting and Multidimensional Poverty Measurement. Journal of Public Economics, 95(7):476487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, C., Metternicht, G., and Wiedmann, T. (2016). National Pathways to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): A Comparative Review of Scenario Modelling Tools. Environmental Science & Policy, 66:199207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, C., Metternicht, G., and Wiedmann, T. (2018). Initial Progress in Implementing the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): A Review of Evidence from Countries. Sustainability Science, 13(5):14531467.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, C., Metternicht, G., and Wiedmann, T. (2019). Prioritising SDG Targets: Assessing Baselines, Gaps and Interlinkages. Sustainability Science, 14: 421438.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amos, R. and Lydgate, E. (2020). Trade, Transboundary Impacts and the Implementation of SDG 12. Sustainability Science, 15(6):16991710.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anand, S. and Sen, A. (1997). Poverty and Human Development: Human Development Papers. In Concepts of Human Development and Poverty: A Multidimensional Perspective, pages 120. United Nations Development Programme, New Yorks.Google Scholar
Anand, S. and Sen, A. (2000). Human Development and Economic Sustainability. World Development, 28(12):20292049.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Angrist, J. and Pischke, J. (2009). Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist’s Companion. Princeton University Press, Princeton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anselin, L., Gallo, J., and Jayet, H. (2008). Spatial Panel Econometrics. In The Econometrics of Panel Data, pages 625660. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Antosz, P., Szczepanska, T., Bouman, L., Polhill, J., and Jager, W. (2022). Sense-making of Causality in Agent-Based Models. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 25(4):557567.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aragam, B., Gu, J., and Zhou, Q. (2019). Learning Large-Scale Bayesian Networks with the sparsebn Package. Journal of Statistical Software, 91(11):138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arechederra Mustre, F. and Urzúa, C. (2017). La Ley de Coordinación Fiscal en México: Una Crítica Aritmética. Sobre México: Temas de Economía, 1(3): 413.Google Scholar
Arndt, C., Jones, S., and Tarp, F. (2015). Assessing Foreign Aid’s Long-Run Contribution to Growth and Development. World Development, 69:618.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arthur, B. (1990). Positive Feedbacks in the Economy. Scientific American, 262(2):9299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arthur, B. (1994). Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arthur, B. (2021). Foundations of Complexity Economics. Nature Reviews Physics, 3(2):136145.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Asadikia, A., Rajabifard, A., and Kalantari, M. (2021). Systematic Prioritisation of SDGs: Machine Learning Approach. World Development, 140:105269.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Athey, S. and Imbens, G. (2017). The State of Applied Econometrics: Causality and Policy Evaluation. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 31(2):332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Axelrod, R. (1997a). The Complexity of Cooperation: Agent-Based Models of Competition and Collaboration. Princeton University Press, Princeton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Axelrod, R. (1997b). The Dissemination of Culture: A Model with Local Convergence and Global Polarization. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 41(2):203226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Axtell, R. (1999). Why Agents?: On the Varied Motivations for Agent Computing in the Social Sciences. In Macal, C. and Sallach, D., editors, Proc. of the Workshop on Agent Simulation: Applications, Models, and Tools., pages 324. Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont.Google Scholar
Axtell, R. L. and Farmer, J. D. (2022). Agent-based Modeling in Economics and Finance: Past, Present, and Future. Journal of Economic Literature. forthcoming.Google Scholar
Baez-Camargo, C. and Passas, N. (2017). Hidden Agendas, Social Norms and Why We Need to Re-Think Anti-Corruption. Working Paper 22, Basel Institute on Governance, Basel.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bain, R., Luyendijk, R., and Bartram, J. (2013). Universal Access to Drinking Water: The Role of Aid. Working Paper wp-2013-088, UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER), Helsinki.Google Scholar
Barnaud, C., Le Page, C., Dumrongrojwatthana, P., and Trébuil, G. (2013). Spatial Representations Are Not Neutral: Lessons from a Participatory Agent-Based Modelling Process in a Land-Use Conflict. Environmental Modelling & Software, 45:150159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barreteau, O., Bousquet, F., Étienne, M., Souchère, V., and d’Aquino, P. (2014). Companion Modelling: A Method of Adaptive and Participatory Research. In Étienne, M., editor, Companion Modelling: A Participatory Approach to Support Sustainable Development, pages 1340. Springer Netherlands, Dordrecht.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basheer, M., Nechifor, V., Calzadilla, A., Ringler, C., Hulme, D., and Harou, J. (2022). Balancing National Economic Policy Outcomes for Sustainable Development. Nature Communications, 13(1):5041.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Batiz-Lazo, B. and González-Correa, I. (2022). The Journey of a Remittance in the US-Mexico Corridor: From My Salary to My Family. Working Paper 114233, University Library of Munich, Munich.Google Scholar
Bayer, R., Renner, E., and Sausgruber, R. (2009). Confusion and Reinforcement Learning in Experimental Public Goods Games. Working Paper 0922, The Austrian Center for Labor Economics and the Analysis of the Welfare State, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Linz, Austria.Google Scholar
BBC News (2022, October 17). How Much Market Chaos Did the Mini-Budget Cause? BBC News. www.bbc.co.uk/news/63229204Google Scholar
Becker, W., Saisana, M., Paruolo, P., and Vandecasteele, I. (2017). Weights and Importance in Composite Indicators: Closing the Gap. Ecological Indicators, 80:1222.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Becu, N., Perez, P., Walker, A., Barreteau, O., and Page, C. (2003). Agent Based Simulation of a Small Catchment Water Management in Northern Thailand: Description of the CATCHSCAPE Model. Ecological Modelling, 170(2): 319331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benedek, D., Gemayel, E., Senhadji, A., and Tieman, A. (2021). A Post-Pandemic Assessment of the Sustainable Development Goals. IMF Staff Discussion Note SDN/2021/003, International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Bhardwaj, M. (2021, February 1). India Budget Ignores Farmers’ Plight, Protest Leaders Say. Reuters. www.reuters.com/world/india-budget-ignores-farmers-plight-protest-leaders-say-2021-02-01Google Scholar
Billger, S. and Goel, R. (2009). Do Existing Corruption Levels Matter in Controlling Corruption?: Cross-Country Quantile Regression Estimates. Journal of Development Economics, 90(2):299305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blanc, D. (2015). Towards Integration at Last? The Sustainable Development Goals as a Network of Targets. Sustainable Development, 23(3):176187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boeren, E. (2019). Understanding Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4 on “Quality Education” from Micro, Meso and Macro Perspectives. International Review of Education, 65(2):277294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bojanic, A. (2013). The Composition of Government Expenditures and Economic Growth in Bolivia. Latin American Journal of Economics, 50(1):83105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourguignon, F. and Chakravarty, S. (2019). The Measurement of Multidimensional Poverty. In Chakravarty, S., editor, Poverty, Social Exclusion and Stochastic Dominance, Themes in Economics, pages 83107. Springer, Singapore.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourguignon, F. and Sundberg, M. (2007). Aid Effectiveness – Opening the Black Box. American Economic Review, 97(2):316321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowles, S. and Polania-Reyes, S. (2012). Economic Incentives and Social Preferences: Substitutes or Complements? Journal of Economic Literature, 50(2): 368425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broadman, H. and Recanatini, F. (2001). Seeds of Corruption – Do Market Institutions Matter? MOST: Economic Policy in Transitional Economies, 11:359392.Google Scholar
Brückner, M. (2013). On the Simultaneity Problem in the Aid and Growth Debate. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 28(1):126150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunetti, A. and Weder, B. (2003). A Free Press is Bad News for Corruption. Journal of Public Economics, 87(7):18011824.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruyninckx, H., Happaerts, S., Brande, K., and Brande, K., editors (2012). Sustainable Development and Subnational Governments: Policy-Making and Multi-Level Interactions. Palgrave Macmillan UK, Basingstoke.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnside, C. and Dollar, D. (2000). Aid, Policies, and Growth. American Economic Review, 90(4):101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Business Tech (2022, February 22). Unions to Protest for Wealth Tax and R1,500 Basic Income Grant in South Africa. Business Tech. https://businesstech.co.za/news/budget-speech/561302/unions-to-protest-for-wealth-tax-and-r1500-basic-income-grant-in-south-africaGoogle Scholar
Calvin, K., Patel, P., Clarke, L. et al. (2019). GCAM v5.1: Representing the Linkages between Energy, Water, Land, Climate, and Economic Systems. Geoscientific Model Development, 12(2):677698.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carley, K. (1996). Validating Computational Models. Working Paper, CASOS Program, Pittsburgh, PA.Google Scholar
Carrella, E. (2014). Zero-Knowledge Traders. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 17(3):4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrella, E. (2021). No Free Lunch when Estimating Simulation Parameters. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 24(2):7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Casini, L. and Manzo, G. (2016). Agent-based Models and Causality: A Methodological Appraisal. Working Paper 2016:7, The Institute for Analytical Sociology, Linköping, Sweden.Google Scholar
Castaneda, G. (2021a). The Paradigm of Social Complexity. Volume I: An Alternative Way of Understanding Societies and Their Economies. Centro de Estudios Espinosa Yglesias, Mexico City.Google Scholar
Castaneda, G. (2021b). The Paradigm of Social Complexity. Volume II: Computational Models, Validation, and Applications. Centro de Estudios Espinosa Yglesias, Mexico City.Google Scholar
Castañeda, G., Chávez-Juárez, F., and Guerrero, O. (2018). How Do Governments Determine Policy Priorities? Studying Development Strategies through Networked Spillovers. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 154: 335361.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castañeda, G. and Guerrero, O. (2018). The Resilience of Public Policies in Economic Development. Complexity, 2018:9672849.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castañeda, G. and Guerrero, O. (2019). The Importance of Social and Government Learning in Ex Ante Policy Evaluation. Journal of Policy Modeling, 41(2): 273293.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castañeda, G. and Guerrero, O. (2020a). Inferencia de Prioridades de Política para el Desarrollo Sostenible. Reporte Metodológico, Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo.Google Scholar
Castañeda, G. and Guerrero, O. (2020b). Inferencia de Prioridades de Política para el Desarrollo Sostenible: El Caso Sub-Nacional de México. Reporte Técnico, Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo.Google Scholar
Castañeda, G. and Guerrero, O. (2020c). Inferencia de Prioridades de Política para el Desarrollo Sostenible: Una Aplicación para el Caso de México. Reporte Técnico, Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo.Google Scholar
Castañeda, G. and Guerrero, O. (2022a). El Presupuesto Público Nacional y los ODS en Colombia: Un Análisis de la Agenda 2030 desde la Metodología de Inferencia de Prioridades de Política (IPP). Documento de Desarrollo 005, United Nations Development Programme.Google Scholar
Castañeda, G. and Guerrero, O. (2022b). Los Objetivos del Desarrollo Sostenible en Bogotá D.C. Un Análisis sobre las Asignaciones Presupuestales y su Impacto en los Indicadores del Desarrollo. Documento de Desarrollo 004, United Nations Development Programme.Google Scholar
Castañeda, G., Íñiguez, G., and Chávez-Juárez, F. (2017). The Complex Network of Public Policies. An Empirical Framework for Identifying Their Relevance in Economic Development. Background Paper, Governance and The Law, The World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Ceriani, L. and Gigliarano, C. (2020). Multidimensional Well-Being: A Bayesian Networks Approach. Social Indicators Research, 152:237263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cervantes, J. (2019). Las Remesas y la Medición de la Pobreza en México. Notas de Remesas 03, Centro de Estudios Monetarios Latinoamericanos, Mexico City.Google Scholar
Chiguil, F. (2014). El Sistema Nacional de Coordinación Fiscal (SNCF) y sus Efectos en el Endeudamiento y el Esfuerzo Fiscal del Distrito Federal y de las Entidades del País, 1995-2010. Análisis Económico, 29(71):79111.Google Scholar
Chiodi, V., Jaimovich, E., and Montes-Rojas, G. (2012). Migration, Remittances and Capital Accumulation: Evidence from Rural Mexico. The Journal of Development Studies, 48(8):11391155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, Z., Homer, D., and Nielson, D. (2011). Dodging Adverse Selection: How Donor Type and Governance Condition Aid’s Effects on School Enrollment. World Development, 39(11):20442053.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cinicioglu, E., Ulusoy, G., Ekici, Ş., Ülengin, F., and Ülengin, B. (2017). Exploring the Interaction between Competitiveness of a Country and Innovation Using Bayesian Networks. Innovation and Development, 7(2):175209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clemens, M., Radelet, S., Bhavnani, R., and Bazzi, S. (2012). Counting Chickens when they Hatch: Timing and the Effects of Aid on Growth. The Economic Journal, 122(561):590617.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colander, D. and Kupers, R. (2014). Complexity and the Art of Public Policy: Solving Society’s Problems from the Bottom Up. Princeton University Press, Princeton.Google Scholar
Coleman, J. (1986). Social Theory, Social Research, and a Theory of Action. American Journal of Sociology, 91(6):13091335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collste, D., Pedercini, M., and Cornell, S. (2017). Policy Coherence to Achieve the SDGs: Using Integrated Simulation Models to Assess Effective Policies. Sustainability Science, 12(6):921931.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
CONEVAL (2021). Informe de Evaluación de la Política de Desarrollo Social 2020. Technical report, Consejo Nacional de Evaluación de la Política de Desarrollo Social, Ciudad de México.Google Scholar
Croix, D. and Delavallade, C. (2011). Democracy, Rule of Law, Corruption Incentives, and Growth. Journal of Public Economic Theory, 13(2):155187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crouch, C. and Farrell, H. (2004). Breaking the Path of Institutional Development? Alternatives to the New Determinism. Rationality and Society, 16(1):543.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunningham, S. (2021). Causal Inference: The Mixtape. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Czyżewska, M. and Mroczek, T. (2014). Bayesian Approach to the Process of Identification of the Determinants of Innovativeness. e-Finanse: Financial Internet Quarterly, 10(2):4456.Google Scholar
Damania, R., Fredriksson, P., and Mani, M. (2004). The Persistence of Corruption and Regulatory Compliance Failures: Theory and Evidence. Public Choice, 121(3):363390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, J. (2018). Agent-Based Modeling’s Open Methodology Approach: Simulation, Reflexivity, and Abduction. OEconomia. History, Methodology, Philosophy, 8(4):509529.Google Scholar
Dawes, J. H. (2020). Are the Sustainable Development Goals Self-Consistent and Mutually Achievable? Sustainable Development, 28(1):101117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Chaisemartin, C. and D’Haultfoeuille, X. (2020). Two-Way Fixed Effects Estimators with Heterogeneous Treatment Effects. American Economic Review, 110(9):29642996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deaton, A. (2010). Instruments, Randomization, and Learning about Development. Journal of Economic Literature, 48(2):424455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeMartino, G. (2021). The Specter of Irreparable Ignorance: Counterfactuals and Causality in Economics. Review of Evolutionary Political Economy, 2(2): 253276.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Detkova, P., Tkachenko, A., and Yakovlev, A. (2021). Gender Heterogeneity of Bureaucrats in Attitude to Corruption: Evidence from List Experiment. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 189:217233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Devarajan, S. and Swaroop, V. (2000). The Implications of Foreign Aid Fungibility for Development Assistance. In Gilbert, C. and Vines, D., editors, The World Bank: Structure and Policies. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Devarajan, S., Swaroop, V., and Zou, H. (1996). The Composition of Public Expenditure and Economic Growth. Journal of Monetary Economics, 37(2):313344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diaz-Cayeros, A. (2019). Fiscal Federalism and Redistribution in Mexico. In Greer, S. and Elliott, H., editors, Federalism and Social Policy: Patterns of Redistribution in 11 Democracies. University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Dimant, E. and Tosato, G. (2018). Causes and Effects of Corruption: What Has Past Decade’s Empirical Research Taught Us? A Survey. Journal of Economic Surveys, 32(2):335356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dollar, D., Fisman, R., and Gatti, R. (2001). Are Women Really the “Fairer” Sex? Corruption and Women in Government. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 46(4):423429.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dougherty, S. and Akgun, O. (2018). Globalisation, Decentralisation and Inclusive Growth. In Kim, J. and Dougherty, S., editors, Fiscal Decentralisation and Inclusive Growth, pages 4973. OECD and Korea Institute of Public Finance, Paris.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dougherty, S., Lorenzoni, L., Marino, A., and Murtin, F. (2019). The Impact of Decentralisation on the Performance of Health Care Systems: A Non-Linear Relationship. OECD Publishing, Paris.Google Scholar
Dreher, A., Nunnenkamp, P., and Thiele, R. (2008). Does Aid for Education Educate Children? Evidence from Panel Data. The World Bank Economic Review, 22(2):291314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunning, T. (2012). Natural Experiments in the Social Sciences: A Design-Based Approach. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
El-Maghrabi, M., Gable, S., Osorio-Rodarte, I., and Verbeek, J. (2018). Sustainable Development Goals Diagnostics: An Application of Network Theory and Complexity Measures to Set Country Priorities. Policy Research Working Paper 8481, The World Bank, Washington, DC.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elbahnasawy, N. and Revier, C. (2012). The Determinants of Corruption: Cross-Country-Panel-Data Analysis. The Developing Economies, 50(4):311333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elhorst, J. (2012). Dynamic Spatial Panels: Models, Methods and Inferences. Spatial Econometrics, 14:528.Google Scholar
Elsner, W. (2017). Complexity Economics as Heterodoxy: Theory and Policy. Journal of Economic Issues, 51(4):939978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Epstein, J. and Axtell, R. (1996). Growing Artificial Societies: Social Science from the Bottom Up. MIT Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Esquivel, G. and Pineda, A. (2007). Las Remesas y la Pobreza en México: Un Enfoque de Pareo de Puntuación de la Propensión. Integración & Comercio, 27:4774.Google Scholar
Fader, M., Cranmer, C., Lawford, R., and Engel-Cox, J. (2018). Toward an Understanding of Synergies and Trade-Offs Between Water, Energy, and Food SDG Targets. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 6. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00112/fullCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagiolo, G., Guerini, M., Lamperti, F., Moneta, A., and Roventini, A. (2019). Validation of Agent-Based Models in Economics and Finance. In Beisbart, C. and Saam, N., editors, Computer Simulation Validation - Fundamental Concepts, Methodological Frameworks, and Philosophical Perspectives, pages 763787. Springer, Cham.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisman, R. and Gatti, R. (2002). Decentralization and Corruption: Evidence across Countries. Journal of Public Economics, 83(3):325345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forman, K., Dougherty, S., and Blöchliger, H. (2020). Synthesising Good Practices in Fiscal Federalism: Key Recommendations from 15 Years of Country Surveys. OECD Publishing, Paris.Google Scholar
Forrester, J. (1973). World Dynamics. Wright-Allen Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Fuso Nerini, F., Sovacool, B., Hughes, N. et al. (2019). Connecting Climate Action with Other Sustainable Development Goals. Nature Sustainability, 2(8): 674680.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
García, T. (2015). Impacto de las Remesas Internas y Externas en la Reducción de la Pobreza en México: Un Análisis a Nivel de Viviendas a partir de Técnicas de Propensity Score Matching (PSM). Papeles de población, 21(86):5.Google Scholar
Garmer, L. (2017). SDG Accelerator and Bottleneck Assessment. Technical Report, United Nations Development Programme, New York.Google Scholar
Gatti, D., Fagiolo, G., Gallegati, M., Richiardi, M., and Russo, A., editors (2018). Agent-Based Models in Economics: A Toolkit. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Geanakoplos, J., Axtell, R., Farmer, J., Howitt, P., Conlee, B., Goldstein, J., Hendrey, M., Palmer, N., and Yang, C. (2012). Getting at Systemic Risk via an Agent-Based Model of the Housing Market. American Economic Review, 102(3): 5358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giugale, M., Trillo, F., and Oliveira, J. (2000). Subnational Borrowing and Debt Management. In Giugale, M. and Webb, S., editors, Achievements and Challenges of Fiscal Decentralization: Lessons from Mexico, pages 237270. The World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Gnimassoun, B. and Massil, J. (2019). Determinants of Corruption: Can We Put All Countries in the Same Basket? The European Journal of Comparative Economics, 16(2):239276.Google Scholar
Gobierno del Estado de México (2020). Informe de Ejecución del Plan de Desarrollo del Estado de México 2017–2023; a 3 Años de la Administración.Google Scholar
González-Pier, E., Barraza-Lloréns, M., Beyeler, N. et al. (2016). Mexico’s Path towards the Sustainable Development Goal for Health: An Assessment of the Feasibility of Reducing Premature Mortality by 40% by 2030. The Lancet Global Health, 4(10):e714e725.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gopalan, S. and Rajan, R. (2016). Has Foreign Aid Been Effective in the Water Supply and Sanitation Sector? Evidence from Panel Data. World Development, 85:84104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grazzini, J. and Richiardi, M. (2015). Estimation of Ergodic Agent-Based Models by Simulated Minimum Distance. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 51:148165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grazzini, J., Richiardi, M., and Sella, L. (2013). Indirect Estimation of Agent-Based Models. An Application to a Simple Diffusion Model. Complexity Economics, 2:2540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffin, K. B. and Enos, J. L. (1970). Foreign Assistance: Objectives and Consequences. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 18(3):313327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guariso, D., Guerrero, O., and Castañeda, G. (2023a). Automatic SDG Budget Tagging: Building Public Financial Management Capacity through Natural Language Processing. Data & Policy, forthcoming.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guariso, D., Guerrero, O., and Castañeda, G. (2023b). Budgeting for SDGs: Quantitative Methods to Assess the Nuanced Impacts of Expenditure Changes. Development Engineering, 8:100113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerrero, O. and Castañeda, G. (2020). Policy Priority Inference: A Computational Framework to Analyze the Allocation of Resources for the Sustainable Development Goals. Data & Policy, 2:e17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerrero, O. and Castañeda, G. (2021a). Does Expenditure in Public Governance Guarantee Less Corruption? Large Non-linearities and Complementarities of the Rule of Law. Economics of Governance, 22(2):139164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerrero, O. and Castañeda, G. (2021b). Quantifying the Coherence of Development Policy Priorities. Development Policy Review, 39(2):155180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerrero, O. and Castañeda, G. (2022). How Does Government Expenditure Impact Sustainable Development? Studying the Multidimensional Link Between Budgets and Development Gaps. Sustainability Science, 17(3):9871007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerrero, O., Castañeda, G., Trujillo, G., Hackett, L., and Chávez-Juárez, F. (2022). Subnational Sustainable Development: The Role of Vertical Intergovernmental Transfers in Reaching Multidimensional Goals. Socio-Economic Planning Sciences, 83:101155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guerrero, O., Guariso, D., and Castañeda, G. (2023). Aid Effectiveness in Sustainable Development: A Multidimensional Approach. World Development, 168:106256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gurung, T., Bousquet, F., and Trébuil, G. (2006). Companion Modeling, Conflict Resolution, and Institution Building: Sharing Irrigation Water in the Lingmuteychu Watershed, Bhutan. Ecology and Society, 11(2):36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guyot, P. and Honiden, S. (2006). Agent-Based Participatory Simulations: Merging Multi-Agent Systems and Role-Playing Games. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 9(4).Google Scholar
Hall, N. (2004). Two Concepts of Causation. In Collins, J., Hall, N., and Paul, L., editors, Causation and Counterfactuals, pages 225276. MIT Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Happaerts, S. (2012). Sustainable Development and Subnational Governments: Going Beyond Symbolic Politics? Environmental Development, 4:217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haque, M. (2004). The Composition of Public Expenditures and Economic Growth in Developing Countries. In Global Journal of Finance and Economics, volume 1, pages 97117. The World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Hausmann, R., Klinger, B., and Wagner, R. (2008a). Doing Growth Diagnostics in Practice: A ’Mindbook’. Working Paper 177, Center for International Development at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Hausmann, R., Rodrik, D., and Velasco, A. (2008b). Growth Diagnostics. In Serra, N. and Stiglitz, J., editors, The Washington Consensus Reconsidered: Towards a New Global Governance, pages 324355. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heckman, J. and Pinto, R. (2022). The Econometric Model for Causal Policy Analysis. Annual Review of Economics, 14(1):893923.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hedstrom, P. (2005). Dissecting the Social: On the Principles of Analytical Sociology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedström, P. and Swedberg, R. (1998). Social Mechanisms: An Introductory Essay. In Hedström, P. and Swedberg, R., editors, Social Mechanisms: An Analytical Approach to Social Theory, Studies in Rationality and Social Change, pages 131. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herd, B. and Miles, S. (2019). Detecting Causal Relationships in Simulation Models Using Intervention-based Counterfactual Analysis. ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology, 10(5):47:147:25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hernan, M. and Robins, J. (2023). Causal Inference. CRC Press, Boca Raton.Google Scholar
Hernández, F. and Rabling, B. (2007). Federal Conditional Transfers in Developing Countries: The Case of FISM in Mexico. Estudios Económicos, 22(2):143184.Google Scholar
Herrero, C., Martínez, R., and Villar, A. (2010). Multidimensional Social Evaluation: An Application to the Measurement of Human Development. Review of Income and Wealth, 56(3):483497.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herzfeld, T. and Weiss, C. (2003). Corruption and Legal (In)Effectiveness: An Empirical Investigation. European Journal of Political Economy, 19(3):621632.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hicks, D. (1997). The Inequality-Adjusted Human Development Index: A Constructive Proposal. World Development, 25(8):12831298.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holland, P. (1986). Statistics and Causal Inference. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 81(396):945960.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huggins, R. (2010). Regional Competitive Intelligence: Benchmarking and Policy-making. Regional Studies, 44(5):639658.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huggins, R. and Izushi, H. (2009). Regional Benchmarking in a Global Context: Knowledge, Competitiveness, and Economic Development. Economic Development Quarterly, 23(4):275293.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, B. (1999). The International Futures (IFs) Modeling Project. Simulation & Gaming, 30(3):304326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ionescu, G., Firoiu, D., Tănasie, A., Sorin, T., Pîrvu, R., and Manta, A. (2020). Assessing the Achievement of the SDG Targets for Health and Well-Being at EU Level by 2030. Sustainability, 12(14):5829.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ivanyna, M. and Shah, A. (2014). How Close Is Your Government to Its People? Worldwide Indicators on Localization and Decentralization. Economics, 8(1):20140003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iwasaki, I. and Suzuki, T. (2012). The Determinants of Corruption in Transition Economies. Economics Letters, 114(1):5460.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Izquierdo, A., Pessino, C., and Vuletin, G., editors (2018). Better Spending for Better Lives: How Latin America and the Caribbean Can Do More with Less. Inter-American Development Bank, Washington, DC.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jain, A. (2001). Corruption: A Review. Journal of Economic Surveys, 15(1):71121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jeffery, C. (2006). Devolution and Local Government. Publius: The Journal of Federalism, 36(1):5773.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jetter, M. and Parmeter, C. (2018). Sorting through Global Corruption Determinants: Institutions and Education Matter – Not Culture. World Development, 109:279294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
John, P. and Margetts, H. (2003). Policy Punctuations in the UK: Fluctuations and Equilibria in Central Government Expenditure since 1951. Public Administration, 81(3):411432.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, B. and Baumgartner, F. (2005). A Model of Choice for Public Policy. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 15(3):325351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, B., Baumgartner, F., Breunig, C., et al. (2009). A General Empirical Law of Public Budgets: A Comparative Analysis. American Journal of Political Science, 53(4):855873.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, B., Baumgartner, F., and True, J. (1998). Policy Punctuations: U.S. Budget Authority, 1947-1995. The Journal of Politics, 60(1):133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kawakubo, S., Murakami, S., Ikaga, T., and Asami, Y. (2018). Sustainability Assessment of Cities: SDGs and GHG Emissions. Building Research & Information, 46(5):528539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kiselakova, D., Stec, M., Grzebyk, M., and Sofrankova, B. (2020). A Multidimensional Evaluation of the Sustainable Development of European Union Countries–An Empirical Study. Journal of Competitiveness, 12(4):56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klašnja, M., Lupu, N., and Tucker, J. (2021). When Do Voters Sanction Corrupt Politicians? Journal of Experimental Political Science, 8(2):161171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klitgaard, R. (1988). Controlling Corruption. University of California Press, Berkeley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knack, S. and Azfar, O. (2003). Trade Intensity, Country Size and Corruption. Economics of Governance, 4(1):118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kotsadam, A., Østby, G., Rustad, S., Tollefsen, A., and Urdal, H. (2018). Development Aid and Infant Mortality. Micro-Level Evidence from Nigeria. World Development, 105:5969.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kroll, C., Warchold, A., and Pradhan, P. (2019). Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): Are We Successful in Turning Trade-Offs into Synergies? Palgrave Communications, 5(1):111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kvangraven, I. (2020). Nobel Rebels in Disguise – Assessing the Rise and Rule of the Randomistas. Review of Political Economy, 32(3):305341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kwon, I. (2014). Motivation, Discretion, and Corruption. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 24(3):765794.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
La Porta, R., Lopez-de-Silanes, F., Shleifer, A., and Vishny, R. (1999). The Quality of Government. The Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 15(1): 222279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamichhane, S., Eğilmez, G., Gedik, R., Bhutta, M., and Erenay, B. (2021). Benchmarking OECD Countries’ Sustainable Development Performance: A Goal-Specific Principal Component Analysis Approach. Journal of Cleaner Production, 287:125040.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lastra-Anadón, C. and Mukherjee, S. (2019). Cross-Country Evidence on the Impact of Decentralisation and School Autonomy on Educational Performance. OECD Publishing, Paris.Google Scholar
Leite, C. and Weidmann, J. (2002). Does Mother Nature Corrupt? Natural Resources, Corruption, and Economic Growth. In Abed, G. and Gupta, S., editors, Governance Corruption & Economic Performance, volume 99, pages 159196. International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Lloyd, P. J. and MacLaren, D. (2002). Measures of Trade Openness Using CGE Analysis. Journal of Policy Modeling, 24(1):6781.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lofgren, H., Harris, R., and Robinson, S., editors (2002). A Standard Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) Model in GAMS, volume 5. International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
López-Córdova, J. (2006). Globalization, Migration and Development: The Role of Mexican Migrant Remittances. Working Paper 20, Institute for the Integration of Latin America and the Caribbean, Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Lopez-Feldman, A. (2011). Migration History, Remittances and Poverty in Rural Mexico. Economics Bulletin, 31(2):12561264.Google Scholar
Lu, D. (2022, November 12). Throwing Soup at the Problem: Are Radical Climate Protests Helping or Hurting the Cause? The Guardian. www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/13/throwing-soup-at-the-problem-are-radical-climate-protests-helping-or-hurting-the-cause.Google Scholar
Lucas, R. (1976). Econometric Policy Evaluation: A Critique. In Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, volume 1, pages 1946. Elsevier, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Lucci, P. and Lynch, A. (2016). The SDGs at City Level: Mumbai’s Example. Working Paper 432, Overseas Development Institute, London.Google Scholar
Luken, R., Mörec, U., and Meinert, T. (2020). Data Quality and Feasibility Issues with Industry-Related Sustainable Development Goal Targets for Sub-Saharan African Countries. Sustainable Development, 28(1):91100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lusseau, D. and Mancini, F. (2019). Income-Based Variation in Sustainable Development Goal Interaction Networks. Nature Sustainability, 2(3):242247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Machingura, F. and Lally, S. (2017). The Sustainable Development Goals and Their Trade-Offs. Case study report, Overseas Development Institute, London.Google Scholar
Mancini, F. (2018). La Pobreza y el Enfoque de Derechos: Algunas Reflexiones Teóricas. In Hernández-Licona, G., Aparicio-Jimenez, R., and Mancini, F., editors, Pobreza y Derechos Sociales En México, page 735. Consejo Nacional de Evaluación de la Política de Desarrollo Social e Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales, UNAM, Ciudad de México.Google Scholar
Manzo, G. (2022). Agent-Based Models and Causal Inference. John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, B. and Galea, S. (2015). Formalizing the Role of Agent-Based Modeling in Causal Inference and Epidemiology. American Journal of Epidemiology, 181(2):9299.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Martinez-Vazquez, J., Lago-Peñas, S., and Sacchi, A. (2017). The Impact of Fiscal Decentralization: A Survey. Journal of Economic Surveys, 31(4):10951129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGowan, P., Stewart, G., Long, G., and Grainger, M. (2019). An Imperfect Vision of Indivisibility in the Sustainable Development Goals. Nature Sustainability, 2(1):4345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKitrick, R. (1998). The Econometric Critique of Computable General Equilibrium Modeling: The Role of Functional Forms. Economic Modelling, 15(4): 543573.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meadows, D. (1972). Limits to Growth. Potomac Associates, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Meadows, D. (1994). Dynamics of Growth in a Finite World. Wright-Allen Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Meadows, D. (2004). Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Mendonça, H. and Fonseca, A. (2012). Corruption, Income, and Rule of Law: Empirical Evidence from Developing and Developed Economies. Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, 32(2):305314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mensi, A. and Udenigwe, C. (2021). Emerging and Practical Food Innovations for Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Target 2.2. Trends in Food Science & Technology, 111:783789.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Midgley, D., Marks, R., and Kunchamwar, D. (2007). Building and Assurance of Agent-Based Models: An Example and Challenge to the Field. Journal of Business Research, 60(8):884893.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mishra, P. and Newhouse, D. (2009). Does Health Aid Matter? Journal of Health Economics, 28(4):855872.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moallemi, E., Bertone, E., Eker, S. et al. (2021). A Review of Systems Modelling for Local Sustainability. Environmental Research Letters, 16(11):113004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mosley, P. (1987). Overseas Aid: Its Defence and Reform. Wheatsheaf Books, Brighton.Google Scholar
Moyer, J. and Hedden, S. (2020). Are We on the Right Path to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals? World Development, 127:104749.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphy, K., Shleifer, A., and Vishny, R. (1989). Industrialization and the Big Push. Journal of Political Economy, 97(5):10031026.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neduziak, L. and Correia, F. (2017). The Allocation of Government Spending and Economic Growth: A Panel Data Study of Brazilian States. Revista de Administração Pública, 51(4):616632.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nijkamp, P., Wang, S., and Kremers, H. (2005). Modeling the Impacts of International Climate Change Policies in a CGE Context: The Use of the GTAP-E Model. Economic Modelling, 22(6):955974.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nordhaus, W. (1973). World Dynamics: Measurement Without Data. The Economic Journal, 83(332):11561183.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oates, W. (1972). Fiscal Federalism. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York.Google Scholar
OECD (2020). A Territorial Approach to the Sustainable Development Goals: Synthesis Report. OECD Urban Policy Reviews. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris.Google Scholar
Ogden, T. (2020). RCTs in Development Economics, Their Critics and Their Evolution. In Bédécarrats, F., Guérin, I., and Roubaud, F., editors, Randomized Control Trials in the Field of Development, pages 126132. Oxford University Press, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ospina-Forero, L., Castañeda, G., and Guerrero, O. (2022). Estimating Networks of Sustainable Development Goals. Information & Management, 59(5):103342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palacios, L., Quiroga, D., Sánchez, O. Ruiz, M. (2022). SDG Alignment and Budget Tagging: Towards an SDG Taxonomy. Tools and Guidelines, UNDP Colombia, Bogotá.Google Scholar
Paldam, M. (2002). The Cross-Country Pattern of Corruption: Economics, Culture and the Seesaw Dynamics. European Journal of Political Economy, 18(2): 215240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Papanek, G. (1973). Aid, Foreign Private Investment, Savings, and Growth in Less Developed Countries. Journal of Political Economy, 81(1):120130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Park, H. (2003). Determinants of Corruption: A Cross-National Analysis. Multinational Business Review, 11(2):2948.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patole, M. (2018). Localization of SDGs through Disaggregation of KPIs. Economies, 6(1):15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearl, J. and Mackenzie, D. (2019). The Book of Why: The New Science of Cause and Effect. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Pedercini, M., Arquitt, S., Collste, D., and Herren, H. (2019). Harvesting Synergy from Sustainable Development Goal Interactions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 116(46):2302123028.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pedercini, M. and Barney, G. (2010). Dynamic Analysis of Interventions Designed to Achieve Millennium Development Goals (MDG): The Case of Ghana. Socio-Economic Planning Sciences, 44(2):8999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pellegrini, L. (2011). Causes of Corruption: A Survey of Cross-Country Analyses and Extended Results. In Pellegrini, L., editor, Corruption, Development and the Environment, pages 2951. Springer Netherlands, Dordrecht.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Persson, A., Rothstein, B., and Teorell, J. (2013). Why Anticorruption Reforms Fail—Systemic Corruption as a Collective Action Problem. Governance, 26(3):449471.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philippidis, G., Shutes, L., M’Barek, R., Ronzon, T., Tabeau, A., and van Meijl, H. (2020). Snakes and Ladders: World Development Pathways’ Synergies and Trade-Offs through the Lens of the Sustainable Development Goals. Journal of Cleaner Production, 267:122147.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Porciello, J., Ivanina, M., Islam, M., Einarson, S., and Hirsh, H. (2020). Accelerating Evidence-Informed Decision-Making for the Sustainable Development Goals Using Machine Learning. Nature Machine Intelligence, 2(10):559565.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pradhan, P., Costa, L., Rybski, D., Lucht, W., and Kropp, J. (2017). A Systematic Study of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Interactions. Earth’s Future, 5(11):11691179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pradhan, P., Subedi, D., Khatiwada, D. et al. (2021). The COVID-19 Pandemic Not Only Poses Challenges, but Also Opens Opportunities for Sustainable Transformation. Earth’s Future, 9(7):e2021EF001996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Presidencia de la República (2017). DECRETO por el Que Se Crea el Consejo Nacional de la Agenda 2030 para el Desarrollo Sostenible.Google Scholar
Pritchett, L. (2021). Let’s Take the Con Out of Randomized Control Trials in Development: The Puzzles and Paradoxes of External Validity, Empirically Illustrated. Working Paper 399, Center for International Development at Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Prud’homme, R. (1995). The Dangers of Decentralization. The World Bank Research Observer, 10(2):201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rajan, R. and Subramanian, A. (2008). Aid and Growth: What Does the Cross-Country Evidence Really Show? The Review of Economics and Statistics, 90(4):643665.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodrik, D. (2009). One Economics, Many Recipes: Globalization, Institutions, and Economic Growth. Princeton University Press, Princeton.Google Scholar
Rodrik, D. (2012). Why We Learn Nothing from Regressing Economic Growth on Policies. Seoul Journal of Economics, 25(2):137151.Google Scholar
Rose-Ackerman, S. (1975). The Economics of Corruption. Journal of Public Economics, 4(2):187203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenstein-Rodan, P. (1943). Problems of Industrialisation of Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. The Economic Journal, 53(210/211):202211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roth, J., Sant’Anna, P., Bilinski, A., and Poe, J. (2022). What’s Trending in Difference-in-Differences? A Synthesis of the Recent Econometrics Literature Journal of Econometrics, 235(2):22182244.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russo, F., Wunsch, G., and Mouchart, M. (2019). Causality in the Social Sciences: A Structural Modelling Framework. Quality & Quantity, 53(5):25752588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sachs, J., Kroll, C., Lafortune, G., Fuller, G., and Woelm, F. (2021). Sustainable Development Report 2021. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sánchez, M. and Ballinez, R. (2020). Implicaciones de la Ley de Coordinación Fiscal en la Distribución de Recursos Hacia las Entidades Federativas. Technical report, HR Credit Rating Agency, Mexico City.Google Scholar
Schelling, T. (1971). Dynamic Models of Segregation. The Journal of Mathematical Sociology, 1(2):143186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seldadyo, H. (2008). Corruption and Governance Around the World: An Empirical Investigation. PhD thesis, University of Groningen, Groningen.Google Scholar
Seldadyo, H. and de Haan, J. (2006). The Determinants of Corruption: A Literature Survey and New Evidence. In EPCS Conference, Turku, Finland.Google Scholar
Sen, A. (1999). Development as Freedom. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Serra, D. (2006). Empirical Determinants of Corruption: A Sensitivity Analysis. Public Choice, 126(1):225256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sethi, T., Custer, S., Turner, J., Sims, J., DiLorenzo, M., and Latourell, R. (2017). Realizing Agenda 2030: Will Donor Dollars and Country Priorities Align with Global Goals? A Baseline Report. Baseline Report, AidData at the College of William & Mary, Williamsburg.Google Scholar
Shacklock, A., Galtung, F., and Sampford, C. (2016). Measuring Corruption – The Validity and Precision of Subjective Indicators. In Shacklock, A., Sampford, C., and Galtung, F., editors, Measuring Corruption, pages 81100. Routledge, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SHCP (2017). Vinculación del Presupuesto a los Objetivos del Desarrollo Sostenible. Anexo 2, Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público.Google Scholar
Siffer, A., Fouque, P., Termier, A., and Largouët, C. (2018). Are Your Data Gathered? In KDD ’18: Proceedings of the 24th ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery & Data Mining, pages 22102218. Association for Computing Machinery, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simon, H. (1957). Models of Man Social and Rational ; Mathematical Essays on Rational Human Behavior. Wiley, New York.Google Scholar
Simon, H. (1962). The Architecture of Complexity. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 106(6):46782.Google Scholar
Simon, H. (1969). The Sciences of the Artificial. MIT. MIT Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Simon, H. (1976). From Substantive to Procedural Rationality. In Kastelein, T. J., Kuipers, S. K., Nijenhuis, W. A., and Wagenaar, G. R., editors, 25 Years of Economic Theory: Retrospect and Prospect, pages 6586. Springer US, Boston.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smits, J. and Permanyer, I. (2019). The Subnational Human Development Database. Scientific Data, 6(1):190038.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sobczak, E., Bartniczak, B., and Raszkowski, A. (2021). Implementation of the No Poverty Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) in Visegrad Group (V4). Sustainability, 13(3):1030.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sterling, E., Pascua, P., Sigouin, A. et al. (2020). Creating a Space for Place and Multidimensional Well-Being: Lessons Learned from Localizing the SDGs. Sustainability Science, 15(4):11291147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Storn, R. and Price, K. (1997). Differential Evolution – A Simple and Efficient Heuristic for Global Optimization over Continuous Spaces. Journal of Global Optimization, 11(4):341359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stossberg, S., Bartolini, D., and Blöchliger, H. (2017). Fiscal Decentralisation and Income Inequality: Empirical Evidence from OECD Countries. Working Paper 1331, OECD, Paris.Google Scholar
Stuart, E., Bradshaw, C., and Leaf, P. (2015). Assessing the Generalizability of Randomized Trial Results to Target Populations. Prevention Science, 16(3): 475485.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sulmont, A., García de Alba Rivas, M., and Visser, S. (2021). Policy Priority Inference for Sustainable Development: A Tool for Identifying Global Inter-linkages and Supporting Evidence-Based Decision Making. In Understanding the Spillovers and Transboundary Impacts of Public Policies. OECD, Paris.Google Scholar
Tanzi, V. (1995). Fiscal Federalism and Decentralization: A Review of Some Efficiency and Macroeconomic Aspects. The World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Taylor, E., Mora, J., Adams, R., and Lopez-Feldman, A. (2008). Remittances, Inequality and Poverty: Evidence from Rural Mexico. In DeWind, J. and Holdaway, J., editors, Migration and Development Within and Across Borders: Research and Policy Perspectives on Internal and International Migration. IOM and SSRC.Google Scholar
Tezanos, S. (2018). The Geography of Development in Latin America and the Caribbean: Towards a New Multidimensional Taxonomy of the Sustainable Development Goals. CEPAL Review, 2008(125):727.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tezanos, S. and Sumner, A. (2013). Revisiting the Meaning of Development: A Multidimensional Taxonomy of Developing Countries. The Journal of Development Studies, 49(12):17281745.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tierney, M., Nielson, D., Hawkins, D. et al. (2011). More Dollars than Sense: Refining Our Knowledge of Development Finance Using AidData. World Development, 39(11):18911906.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Treisman, D. (2000). The Causes of Corruption: A Cross-National Study. Journal of Public Economics, 76(3):399457.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
UN General Assembly (2015). Transforming Our World : The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Technical Report A/RES/70/1, United Nations, New York.Google Scholar
United Nations (2020). SDG Indicators, United Nations Global SDG Database.Google Scholar
Valor, C. (2012). The Contribution of the Energy Industry to the Millennium Development Goals: A Benchmark Study. Journal of Business Ethics, 105(3):277287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wayland, J. (2017). Constraints on Foreign Aid Effectiveness in the Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WaSH) Sector. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development, 8(1):4452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weitz, N., Carlsen, H., Nilsson, M., and Skånberg, K. (2018). Towards Systemic and Contextual Priority Setting for Implementing the 2030 Agenda. Sustainability Science, 13(2):531548.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wiesner, E. (2003). Fiscal Federalism in Latin America: From Entitlements to Markets. IDB, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Williamson, C. (2008). Foreign Aid and Human Development: The Impact of Foreign Aid to the Health Sector. Southern Economic Journal, 75(1):188207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, S. (2011). Chasing Success: Health Sector Aid and Mortality. World Development, 39(11):20322043.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Bank (2017). World Development Report 2017: Governance and the Law. International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
World Bank (2020). SDG Atlas 2020.Google Scholar
Yilmaz, G. (2018). Composition of Public Investment and Economic Growth: Evidence from Turkish Provinces, 1975–2001. Public Sector Economics, 42(2): 187214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhou, X. and Moinuddin, M. (2016). Review of the SDG Index and Dashboards: An Example of Japan’s Global Ranking Results. IGES Working Paper.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Omar A. Guerrero, The Alan Turing Institute, London, Gonzalo Castañeda, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
  • Book: Complexity Economics and Sustainable Development
  • Online publication: 04 January 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009022910.019
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Omar A. Guerrero, The Alan Turing Institute, London, Gonzalo Castañeda, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
  • Book: Complexity Economics and Sustainable Development
  • Online publication: 04 January 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009022910.019
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Omar A. Guerrero, The Alan Turing Institute, London, Gonzalo Castañeda, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
  • Book: Complexity Economics and Sustainable Development
  • Online publication: 04 January 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009022910.019
Available formats
×