Find Professionals
Consult.       Engage.      Collaborate.
Home             List All Professionals             List By Areas of Expertise
Bokosi
Fanwell Bokosi
UNECA, Lusaka
Economic Affairs Officer, SRO-SA- Inclusive Industrialization Section
Fanwell Kenala Bokosi is an Economic Affairs Officer in the Inclusive Industrialization section of UNECA's Sub Regional Office for Southern Africa since March 2020. Before joining UNECA he was the Executive Director at the African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD) since November 2014, responsible for the overall development and delivery of the organization’s policies and programs. He also served as AFRODAD's policy adviser on economic governance and development. Bokosi holds a doctorate in economics from the University of Kent in the United Kingdom
Areas of Expertise
Agricultural Economics And Policy, Development Economics, Econometrics, Economic Research And Analysis Including Macroeconomic Trends, Economics

Education:

Doctorate
Economics
University of Kent at Canterbury
PhD Economics

Language:

Publication:

Private Sector in Development: Infrastructure Challenges and Opportunities in: Tomlinson, B (ed.) Africa in Reality of Aid 2012 Report (ROA) Aid and the Private Sector: Catalysing Poverty Reduction and Development?

Reality of Aid

2012
Africa: The Norwegian Debt Audit from an International Perspective. In: Øvretveit, K, (ed.) The Norwegian Debt Audit from an International Perspective. Oslo: SLUG, pp. 21-26.
2011
Modernizing Foreign Assistance Insights from the Field: Malawi, Save the Children US and UK
2009
Modernizing Foreign Assistance Insights from the Field: Liberia, Save the Children US and UK
2009
The Next Revolution: Giving Every Child a Chance to Survive, International Save the Children Alliance
2008
Selling Our Way into Poverty The Commercialisation of Poverty in Malawi
2008
Export Trade and Economic Growth in Malawi: A Disaggregated Approach, International Journal of Economics and Financial Research, 1 (7): 97-105
2015
Stock Market Development and Economic Growth in Zimbabwe, International Journal of Economics and Finance, 3 (5):140-50
2011
Household Poverty Dynamics: A Bivariate Probit Analysis, Journal of Applied Sciences, 7 (2): 258-62
2007
Yes