Ideas to Action:

Independent research for global prosperity

CGD in the News

Grads Preferred to Grandmas in Proposed U.S. Immigration Bill (Reuters)

5/6/13

Senior Fellow Michael Clemens is quoted in a Reuters article on the economic need for immigration.

This Is a Golden Age of Global Growth (Financial Times)

4/8/13

Senior Fellow Arvind Subramanian writes an op-ed for The Financial Times on why the golden age of economic growth beginning in the 1990s has mostly survived the recent economic downturn.

La Economia China y Las Posibles Repercusiones en America Latina (CNN Chile)

1/21/13

Senior Fellow Liliana Rojas-Suarez discusses the impact of China in Latin America on CNN Chile.

Sovereign Fund Eyed for U.S. Infrastructure (Market Watch)

3/14/11

Vij Ramachandran was quoted in a MarketWatch piece on her research on sovereign wealth funds.

In Search of the Bottom Billion (Yahoo News)

3/14/11

Research by Ben Leo, Todd Moss, and Andy Sumner was mentioned in a bottom billion article featured on

Yahoo News

Viva la Recesion! (Foreign Policy)

3/9/11

Foreign Policy posted Charles Kenny's weekly column on the impact of recessions on democracy.

The Future of Engaging with the Rest of the World (Huffington Post)

12/16/10

Huffington Post columnist John Sullivan discusses Steve Radelet's book Emerging Africa in relation to the recent release of QDDR.

China Elevates its Economic Profile in Africa

11/2/06

Senior fellow Todd Moss was quoted in this USA Today article about China's expanding role as a development actor in Africa.

From the article:

"China is taking a 'realpolitik' point of view, trying to secure natural resources to continue fueling its high rates of economic growth. ... For Africa, it's a mixed bag," says Todd Moss, senior fellow at the Center for Global Development in Washington.

The Difference Between Calves and Cows

10/31/06

Research fellow David Roodman's latest publication, Microfinance as Business (co-authored with Uzma Qureshi), is discussed in this posting on Salon.com by Andrew Leonard. The article focuses on the pros and cons of micro-finance for development.

From the article:

For a couple of weeks now, I've been puzzling about poor women and cows in Bangladesh.

Let me explain.

On the same day that Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank and chief apostle of the church of microcredit, received the Nobel Peace Prize, the Center For Global Development (CGD), a Washington-based nonprofit, published a study by David Roodman and Uzma Qureshi with the title "Microfinance as Business."

Microfinance is generally taken to mean the provision of small loans -- microcredit -- and other financial services to very poor people, and Yunus is widely acclaimed as the man who pioneered its effective application. So CGD's timing was excellent. But the thrust of the study was contrarian to the point of outright dissidence. Though the Nobel Prize committee, as CGD noted in its own interview with Roodman published three days later, "praised Yunus and Grameen for 'their efforts to create economic and social development from below,'" Roodman says that for him "the jury is still out" over whether microfinance contributes to economic development among the poor. In their paper, Roodman and Qureshi argued that there isn't yet definitive evidence that microfinance actually lifts people out of poverty.

"Unfortunately, rigorously derived evidence that microcredit helps people in this way is surprisingly thin."

Surprising is the right word, because microfinance has never been hotter. 2005 was dubbed "The Year of Microcredit" by the United Nations. Philanthropists, aid donors, and profit-seeking capitalists of every stripe are all pouring hundreds of milllions of dollars into microfinance schemes across the globe. (An absorbing article in last week's New Yorker delves deeply into the differing motivations, and consequent friction between, the new players in microfinance, who include Microsoft's Bill "philanthropist" Gates and eBay founder Pierre "profit-seeking" Omidyar.) Heartwarming success stories of people living in extreme poverty -- mostly women -- who have clawed their way out of the most abject circumstances with the help of miniscule loans, abound...

A Farewell to Alms?

7/25/05

The New Yorker magazine reporter James Surowiecki, author of the best-selling book Wisdom of Crowds, cites CGD’s recent research on the growth impact of aid in a July 25 Talk of the Town column summarizing the debate about aid effectiveness.

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