structural transformation - meaning and definition. What is structural transformation
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What (who) is structural transformation - definition

PROVISION OF LOANS BY THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND AND WORLD BANK TO COUNTRIES THAT EXPERIENCED ECONOMIC CRISES
Structural adjustment program; Structural Adjustment Program; Structural adjustment loan; Structural adjustment policy; Structural Adjustment Loans; Structural Adjustment Loan; Structural adjustment loans; Structural adjustment programs; Structural Adjustment Programs; Structural adjustments; Structural Adjustment Programme; Structural Adjustment Policies; Structural adjustment programme; Structural reforms

Transformation (genetics)         
  • Schematic of bacterial transformation – for which artificial competence must first be induced.
PLANNED GENETIC ALTERATION OF A CELL BY UPTAKE OF GENETIC MATERIAL FROM THE ENVIRONMENT
DNA transfer; Bacterial transformation; Transformation, bacterial; Genetic transformation; Cell transformation, viral; Cell transformation, neoplastic; Transformation, genetic; Transformation (bacteria); Cellular transformation; Yeast transformation; Genetic transformation of plants
In molecular biology and genetics, transformation is the genetic alteration of a cell resulting from the direct uptake and incorporation of exogenous genetic material from its surroundings through the cell membrane(s). For transformation to take place, the recipient bacterium must be in a state of competence, which might occur in nature as a time-limited response to environmental conditions such as starvation and cell density, and may also be induced in a laboratory.
Geometric transformation         
  •  Original image (based on the map of France)
  •  [[Isometry]]
  • Similarity]]
  •  [[Affine transformation]]
  •  [[Projective transformation]]
  • Inversion]]
  •  [[Conformal transformation]]
  • Equiareal transformation]]
  •  [[Homeomorphism]]
  •  [[Diffeomorphism]]
BIJECTION OF A SET HAVING SOME GEOMETRIC STRUCTURE TO ITSELF OR ANOTHER SUCH SET
Discrete transformation; Continuous transformation; Transformation (combinatorics); Transformation (geometry); Geometrical transformation; Partial transformation; Geometric transformations
In mathematics, a geometric transformation is any bijection of a set to itself (or to another such set) with some salient geometrical underpinning. More specifically, it is a function whose domain and range are sets of points — most often both \mathbb{R}^2 or both \mathbb{R}^3 — such that the function is injective so that its inverse exists.
Tseytin transformation         
  • center
Tseitin-Transformation; Tseitin transformation
The Tseytin transformation, alternatively written Tseitin transformation, takes as input an arbitrary combinatorial logic circuit and produces a boolean formula in conjunctive normal form (CNF), which can be solved by a CNF-SAT solver. The length of the formula is linear in the size of the circuit.

Wikipedia

Structural adjustment

Structural adjustment programs (SAPs) consist of loans (structural adjustment loans; SALs) provided by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB) to countries that experience economic crises. Their purpose is to adjust the country's economic structure, improve international competitiveness, and restore its balance of payments.

The IMF and World Bank (two Bretton Woods institutions) require borrowing countries to implement certain policies in order to obtain new loans (or to lower interest rates on existing ones). These policies are typically centered around increased privatization, liberalizing trade and foreign investment, and balancing government deficit. The conditionality clauses attached to the loans have been criticized because of their effects on the social sector.

SAPs are created with the stated goal of reducing the borrowing country's fiscal imbalances in the short and medium term or in order to adjust the economy to long-term growth. By requiring the implementation of free market programmes and policy, SAPs are supposedly intended to balance the government's budget, reduce inflation and stimulate economic growth. The liberalization of trade, privatization, and the reduction of barriers to foreign capital would allow for increased investment, production, and trade, boosting the recipient country's economy. Countries that fail to enact these programmes may be subject to severe fiscal discipline. Critics argue that the financial threats to poor countries amount to blackmail, and that poor nations have no choice but to comply.

Since the late 1990s, some proponents of structural adjustments (also called structural reform), such as the World Bank, have spoken of "poverty reduction" as a goal. SAPs were often criticized for implementing generic free-market policy and for their lack of involvement from the borrowing country. To increase the borrowing country's involvement, developing countries are now encouraged to draw up Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs), which essentially take the place of SAPs. Some believe that the increase of the local government's participation in creating the policy will lead to greater ownership of the loan programs and thus better fiscal policy. The content of PRSPs has turned out to be similar to the original content of bank-authored SAPs. Critics argue that the similarities show that the banks and the countries that fund them are still overly involved in the policy-making process. Within the IMF, the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility was succeeded by the Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility, which is in turn succeeded by the Extended Credit Facility.

Examples of use of structural transformation
1. They have not fully realized that the Turkish economy has gone through a structural transformation.
2. A prime minister with the biggest mandate for change since Attlee in 1'45 ran away from real and structural transformation.
3. Seven months after the crucial summit in Brussels, the question is now whether those changes indicate an irreversible structural transformation in the country, or whether they remain at the level of legislative reform not yet understood by the public.
4. Kerala agricultural economy has been undergoing structural transformation from the mid–seventies by switching over a large proportion of its traditional crop area that was devoted to subsistence crops like rice and tapioca to more remunerative crops like coconut and rubber.