September 15, 2009
This year’s World Bank flagship publication, the World Development Report 2010, is on climate change – a significant departure from the tradition of devoting turn of the decade WDRs to an overview of poverty. It’s an unabashed bit of climate change advocacy, remorselessly upbeat and optimistic (even when the story it tells suggests rather more gloom is in order) and
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Golf courses v solar power; Africa is big; climate change in Nepal; Krugman v maths; renewable energy awards and what success in Copenhagen might look like: links I liked
September 14, 2009
According to the United Nations 170,000 square kilometres of forest is destroyed each year. If we constructed solar farms at the same rate, we would be finished in 3 years. This would require only 12 times the land area currently devoted to golf courses. The influence of the Mercator projection runs deep –Africa is much bigger than most people think.
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Development v Climate Change: a new UN report tries to square the circle
September 11, 2009
September is the start of report season, an avalanche of global roundups from UN agencies, thinktanks etc that seems to grow in number every year. As it coincides with the party conference season, start of the college year in the Northern hemisphere etc etc, it all makes for a horrific backlog. So to ease the collective bottleneck, here’s some highlights
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Game on (finally) in climate change talks
September 10, 2009
After months of futile and wearying paralysis, marked by interminable meetings full of little more than posturing and the endless repetition of fixed positions, the climate change talks seem to be entering full negotiating mode, and not before time, with the Copenhagen climate summit only 3 months away. For the ‘glass half full’ optimistic version, check out Leo Horn’s summary
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Update on US aid reform
September 9, 2009
These are exciting times for anyone who wants to reform the US aid system, as years of preparation and lobbying start to bear fruit (see my previous blog and click here for an excellent introduction to US aid from Oxfam America). Congress has taken an early lead on reform – with three pieces of legislation currently in the works (bipartisan bills
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Watching Bill Easterly; Africa’s falling fertility; Krugman misses Nixon; more microcredit; well-being and big numbers: links I liked
September 8, 2009
Some aid supporters, fed up with Bill Easterly whinging on about aid on his Aid Watch blog, have started a ‘Bill Easterly Watch’ blog, and announced it on…. Aid Watch of course. The Economist predicts a much-needed ‘demographic dividend’ from Africa’s falling fertility rates The raucous healthcare debate has Paul Krugman missing the rationalism of Richard Nixon, and worrying that
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Socialism in the USA. Yes, really.
September 7, 2009
It’s Labor Day in the USA today, and so it seems a good moment to talk about a flourishing US industry that is built on socialist lines. Every year, by general agreement, the most talented new staff are allocated to the weakest firms to ‘keep things fair’. Firms are subject to salary caps and/or taxes on excessive wages (are you
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How to find $280bn for poor countries this weekend
September 4, 2009
This weekend the finance ministers of the G20 – the world’s most powerful nations -will meet in London. While the rich world’s green shootists apparently feel that the worst of the economic crisis is behind us, the poorest countries are being hammered, with those living on the margins of the global economy paying the highest price for the bankers’ folly.
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Do the poorest countries need industrial policy? The UN says yes.
September 3, 2009
Jetlag is a wonderful way to catch up on your paper backlog. Just been reading UNCTAD’s 2009 Least Developed Countries report (published in July). Limpid prose it ain’t, but it sets out a coherent case for a post-Washington Consensus push for state-led industrialization in the world’s poorest countries. (I blame the turgid nature of UN-speak for the over-lengthy nature of
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Private v public provision of water and sanitation: what works?
September 2, 2009
The International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth (a UNDP-funded thinktank, based in Brazil) has published an excellent 35 page ‘Poverty in Focus’ on public v private provision of basic utilities, especially water and sanitation, (but also touching on electricity). Some highlights from the overview, based on a series of country case studies: ‘Rapid urbanisation and informal settlements pose particular problems
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A great insider’s take on the financial crisis
September 1, 2009
Normally I’m not a big fan of those ‘roundtable’ pieces in current affairs mags that usually feature 3 or 4 big egos all scoring points and showing off to each other. But the roundtable on the financial crisis in this month’s Prospect magazine is an exception. Featuring Adair Turner, (the chair of the Financial Services Authority, Britain’s financial regulator, see
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Ugandan comic books; cash transfers in New York; praise for Jacob Zuma; Reaganite timewarp on healthcare reform and wonderful Magnum pics: links I liked
August 28, 2009
Chris Blattman raves (in a good way) about a comic book (sorry, graphic novel) about the civil war in Uganda And links to a fascinating attempt to apply the lessons of conditional cash transfer programmes in Mexico and Brazil to…… New York The FT finds much to celebrate in Jacob Zuma’s first hundred days ‘The astonishing thing about the current
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