http://www.worldbank.org/en/country identifies the 145 nations.
http://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/poverty/overview identifies "strategies".
Costa Rica has had to place "currency controls" "....to stem the flow of capital from developed markets that has driven the colon higher....". "Chinchilla, 53, has called capital inflows from developed markets seeking higher yields “weapons of mass destruction” against the nation’s economy. Her government submitted a bill to Congress this week that would raise taxes to 38 percent from 8 percent on foreign investors who transfer out of the country profits from capital inflows."
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-2 ... -says.html and that's just scratching the surface of what's REALLY going down behind them closed doors and the "...let them eat cake..." viewpoint of the very, very, very few who control the place.
Remember....we're discussing a nation which has no centralized blood bank: The caja hospitals do not share with the private hospitals and vice-versa. 4 doctors I spoke with didn't even know there was such a thing as a pump for blood transfusions....that gravity was good enough! And that's just for starters. (These doctors also explained to me to NEVER go to a private hospital for critical, emergency situations given the lack of an organized methodology to secure blood; that if you go to a private hospital from the get and require blood transfusions there is a good chance you could bleed to death because that's just the way it is.....go to a public hospital, get stabilized, and then transfer to the private hospital and hope to heck you can get air ambulanced back to wherever). And that's just the tip of the iceberg.
It's a 3rd world country once it's all said and done.....
Gersen wrote:
I think the diplomats and the World Bank are now using a different term rather then "3rd world": "Developing". And that is how CR is now categorized along with 144 other countries. Some surprises on that list, some you would think "no way" and some you'd say" that's not a surprise for sure".
Source: World Bank March 2013, sorry, too lazy to go back and get the link, but shouldn't be hard to find, I found it on first google of "Developing Countries".
Didn't dig into the criteria as to how you make the "D" list.