Multimedia
CGD's weekly Global Prosperity Wonkcast, event videos, whiteboard talks, slides, and more.
How to Help the World’s Least Developed Countries: UNCTAD’s Deb Bhattacharya
There are 49 countries in the world that the United Nations classifies as Least Developed Countries (LDCs). How does a country wind up on the list, and how is the international community working to help these countries develop? My guest this week is Debapriya Bhattacharya, currently a Special Advisor to the Secretary General of the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), focusing on issues related to Least Developed Countries.
Deb begins by explaining how the official Least Developed Country list is defined. There are three criteria for inclusion, he explains. Obviously, poverty, as measured in per capita income, is one of them. A second is what Deb calls “human assets,” expressed in education and health indicators. And the third is a measure of economic vulnerability to natural or manmade disasters."Haiti is a classic example of how vulnerable these economies are,” Deb explains. “You get hit not only by man-made disasters, but also by natural exogenous shocks."
How the G-8 and G-20 Fared on Development: Liliana Rojas-Suarez & Sarah Jane Staats
Leaders of the world’s largest and richest countries met over the weekend in Ontario, Canada. What did they accomplish? This week on the Wonkcast, I’m joined by two guests: CGD Senior Fellow Liliana Rojas-Suarez and Director of Policy Outreach Sarah Jane Staats. We examine the statements released by the two groups—looking specifically at what they have to say about several key policy areas for global development.
Listen to the Wonkcast to hear our conversation. Among other topics, we discuss:
- What President Obama’s G8 announcement on his administration’s development strategy means for the U.S. aid reform agenda.
- The significance of the G20’s release of a set of principles for financial inclusion.
- How the headline issues of financial stability and regulation might affect emerging countries.
- What was said (and wasn’t said) in Toronto on expanding trade, especially for the world’s least developed countries.
- What role an announced G20 Working Group on development might play in the run-up to the next G20 summit this fall in Seoul, South Korea.
Market Access for the Poor: Kimberly Ann Elliott on Trade Preference Reform
This week, I’m joined on the Global Prosperity Wonkcast by Kimberly Ann Elliott, a senior fellow here at the Center for Global Development. Kim’s research focuses on ways in which rich country trade policy affects the developing world. She currently chairs CGD’s working group on Global Trade Preference Reform.
Trade preferences are a way for countries to offer access to their markets to poor countries, in spite of other import tariffs or quotas that might otherwise apply. Kim tells me that most countries, including a growing number of advanced developing countries, have some form of trade preference program. However, she says, not all of them benefit developing countries very much.
CGD Special Discussion with David Gergen on Obama's Global Development Policy (Event Video)
Director of the Center for Public Leadership at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, editor-at-large at U.S. News & World Report, and a senior political analyst for CNN, David Gergen joined CGD president Nancy Birdsall, and CGD senior fellows who authored essays in our recent book, The White House and the World: A Global Development Agenda for the Next U.S. President, for a lively discussion of the prospects for improved U.S. development policy under President Barack Obama.
The recent collapse of