Weekly Tweets for 2012-09-21
- My letter in Lancet questioning finding of health aid fungibility http://t.co/4o9IeE9q Post explaining it http://t.co/zZ83G0fn #
Independent research for global prosperity
(Yes, I'm still here.)
Tomorrow, Boston. Seminar at Harvard Business School.
Oct 3, New York. Public event at the Financial Access Initiative and New York University. Format: Jonathan Morduch will interview me.
I also posted this on CGD's global health policy blog.
The Lancet just published a letter I wrote questioning an influential study in its pages that concluded that most or all foreign aid for health goes into non-health uses. The letter follows up on concerns I expressed in this space in April 2010. Why the 2.5-year lag? Only this past January did the Seattle-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) share the data set and computer code that it used to generate the published findings. And only with those in hand could I check my concerns and describe them to others with credibility. (I'm grateful to the kind people at IHME who gave me the data and code, but don't want to let the institution per se off the hook.)
Confusingly, in May the Public Library of Science published another critique of the same article. I questioned that reanalysis, and it was eventually retracted.
Here, I sketch my argument, comment on the reply from Chunling Lu and Christopher Murray, then call out the Lancet for a certain lack of transparency, as well as for sometimes bringing more reputation than rigor to policy-relevant social science research.
Today the president of Bangladesh signed an amendment to the Grameen Bank Ordinance that effects a government take-over the Nobel Prize--winning institution. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who is far more powerful than the president, had already approved the amendment.
The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Microfinance has called for evidence from the public on whether and how to regulate microfinance. I've you've got something to say about this, tell them. The deadline is 16 days from now, August 27.