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Texas Man Pleads Guilty to Conspiring to Smuggle and Traffic Counterfeit Viagra Tablets

A Texas man pleaded guilty today to conspiring to smuggle and to traffic in counterfeit and misbranded pharmaceuticals, including Viagra tablets, from China.



  • OPA Press Releases

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Extending the Patentable Life of 3D Printers: A Lesson From the Pharmaceutical Industry

Modern innovation typically occurs one step-improvement at a time. Some clients initially question whether their new application of an existing technology is patentable. Usually, the answer is ‘yes.’ Under U.S. law (and most other jurisdictions), an innovation to an existing technology is patentable so long as at least one claim limitation is novel and non-obvious....… Continue Reading




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Op-Ed: I see face masks as a socially acceptable fashion opportunity. So should you

Building a wardrobe of fashionable face masks doesn't make me insensitive to the grave consequences of coronavirus.




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Executable cancer models: successes and challenges




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Detection of metastable electronic states by Penning trap mass spectrometry




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Evaluation of an AI system for the detection of diabetic retinopathy from images captured with a handheld portable fundus camera: the MAILOR AI study




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Elevated sorbitol underlies a heritable neuropathy




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Biallelic mutations in <i>SORD</i> cause a common and potentially treatable hereditary neuropathy with implications for diabetes




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Shutting down fruit vegetables groceries amid peak heat and Ramzan pushes Ahmedabadis to edge

The Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) Commissioner Vijay Nehra was already pushed into a quarantine following the rising numbers of patients in the city and Additional Chief Secretary Rajiv Gupta was brought in as in charge of the fight against Covid in Ahmedabad while CEO of Gujarat Maritime Board Mukesh Kumar was brought in as the incharge Commissioner.




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Ferrari to make F-duct more comfortable for drivers

Ferrari will tweak its F-duct system so that it is more "comfortable" for the drivers, Fernando Alonso has revealed




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Hamilton admits Webber was unbeatable

Lewis Hamilton admitted he had no response to Mark Webber's pace at the British Grand Prix but said McLaren could be very proud of its performance




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Schumacher's condition still critical but stable

Michael Schumacher's condition has remained stable since Tuesday after spending a fourth night in a coma in hospital




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Schumacher 'is considered as stable' but still 'critical'

Michael Schumacher's manager says his "condition can be considered as stable" but that he remains in a critical condition




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Myanmar’s stable leadership change belies Aung San Suu Kyi’s growing political vulnerability

Myanmar stands at a critical crossroads in its democratic transition. In late March, the Union Parliament elected former Speaker of the Lower House U Win Myint as the country’s new president. U Win Myint is a longtime member of the ruling National League for Democracy (NLD) and a trusted partner of State Counselor Aung San…

      
 
 




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Turkey’s unpalatable choices in Syria

Syria’s northwestern province of Idlib is experiencing a deepening humanitarian crisis. As the Russia-backed Syrian regime pushes to retake this last major enclave of the Syrian opposition, hundreds of thousands of people have fled towards Turkey’s borders. According to the United Nations, 700,000 people have fled Idlib since December 1. As the main backer of…

       




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21st annual “Wall Street Comes to Washington” roundtable

In the U.S., health care is big business—accounting for nearly one-fifth of the overall economy. And federal health policies often move financial markets. Understanding emerging health care market trends and their implications can provide critical context for federal policymakers. On Tuesday, November 15, the Leonard D. Schaeffer Initiative for Innovation in Health Policy, a partnership […]

      
 
 




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India at the global high table


Event Information

April 20, 2016
3:30 PM - 5:00 PM EDT

Falk Auditorium
Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20036

Register for the Event

In recent decades, India has taken on a growing global presence, one that has been seen as increasing even more since Prime Minister Narendra Modi took office nearly two years ago. In a new book, “India at the Global High Table: The Quest for Regional Primacy and Strategic Autonomy” (Brookings Institution Press, 2016), former U.S. ambassadors Teresita Schaffer and Howard Schaffer explore how India is managing its evolving international role, assessing the country’s strategic vision and foreign policy, and the negotiating behavior that links the two.

On April 20, The India Project at Brookings hosted a panel discussion to discuss the book and, particularly, four elements highlighted in it: India’s exceptionalism; its nonalignment and drive for “strategic autonomy;” its determination to maintain regional primacy; and, more recently, its surging economy.

Join the conversation on Twitter using #IndiaHighTable

Audio

Transcript

Event Materials

      
 
 




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At climate summits, the urgency from the streets must be brought to the negotiating table

COP25, the annual global climate summit that ended last weekend in Madrid, offered a visible public spectacle, but little substantive progress. Part of the problem was that the summit — technically known as the 25th session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention to Combat Climate Change (UNFCCC) — was…

       




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Seattle Uniquely Placed to Compete on Global Stage, but Success is Not Inevitable

In an increasingly international and interconnected economy, Seattle was global before global was cool.

The region’s competitive global assets include internationally competitive firms, strategically important ports and one of the nation’s largest foreign-born populations.

Still, today’s unique economic moment demands an extra measure of purposeful global engagement.

As cities and metropolitan areas begin to emerge from the Great Recession, leaders are realizing the need to restructure the economy — to move from one based on debt and consumption to one powered by production and innovation.

At the same time, most economic growth over the next decade will occur outside of America’s borders. As of 2009, the combined economies of Brazil, India and China eclipsed that of the United States and now account for more than one-fifth of the global economy. By 2018, their share is expected to surpass one-quarter.

The developing world, with a rapidly rising middle class, represents a huge market opportunity for American firms. China and India alone are expected to increase their urban populations by more than 500 million over the next 20 years, which naturally leads to a rise in their consumer classes. By 2050, Chinese and Indian consumers will account for more than half of all middle-class consumption worldwide, up from just 2 percent in 2000.

These growing metropolises will also require massive investments in infrastructure and face huge challenges as they expand, challenges that U.S. firms have the expertise to solve — in transportation and mobility, in sustainability and clean energy, in information technology and software.

America’s metropolitan areas are uniquely positioned to take advantage of this dual challenge through increased trade and investment. The top 100 metro areas not only produce three-quarters of our gross domestic product, they also concentrate our most innovative firms, our research institutions and universities, and the majority of our skilled workers.

So how does the central Puget Sound region stack up? Recently, I came to Seattle as part of the Global Cities Initiative, a joint project of the Brookings Institution and JPMorgan Chase. This initiative aims to catalyze a shift in economic development priorities and practices that would result in more globally connected metropolitan areas and more sustainable economic growth.

The metro area has a strong platform for trade: firms such as Boeing, Microsoft, and Amazon; world-class research assets including the University of Washington and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; and a strong legacy of globally oriented leadership, with a wide coalition, including public, private and civic leaders, actively promoting a regional strategy for global engagement.

The data bear this out: While Seattle is the 15th largest metro area in the United States, it has the sixth highest export total, sending more than $47 billion in goods and services abroad in 2012. These exports are overwhelmingly driven by globally competitive clusters in aerospace and information technology.

Partly due to this industry specialty, Seattle’s economy is also highly innovative and uniquely oriented toward science, technology, engineering and math: More than one-quarter of jobs in the metro are in STEM occupations, the fourth highest share of any metropolitan area in the country.

Still, in such a competitive and dynamic global economy, no metro area can afford complacency. In order to maintain its position in the global economy, Seattle needs to get serious about global engagement.

First, focus on global trade and investment. Continue the collaborative efforts of your public, private and civic leaders to focus economic development strategies on growth abroad. In Seattle earlier this month, regional leaders committed to expanding these efforts, joining the Global Cities Initiative’s Exchange, through which the metro area will develop a strategy to increase foreign direct investment in key industries.

Second, invest in what matters. To compete globally, metro areas must be strong at home. In Seattle, this means shoring up your workforce-development pipeline so that local residents have a path to good jobs in advanced industries. It also calls for a regional approach to financing and delivering transportation solutions that not only reduce congestion at home, but also improve your connections abroad.

Finally, metropolitan leaders must look beyond their own borders, identify their trading partners, and build relationships to increase both trade and investment. For example, as part of the Global Cities Initiative, Chicago and Mexico City entered into a first-of-its-kind economic partnership that builds on the extensive economic, social, cultural linkages between the two metros to make both more prosperous.

There are promising efforts under way in the region, as the King County Aerospace Alliance has started collaborating with Aéro Montréal so that the two aerospace clusters can be more competitive.

Simply put, in today’s economic landscape, every city is a global city. The success of regional economies hinges on their engagement throughout the global economy. Seattle has an enviable hand to play; but success is not inevitable.

This opinion piece originally appeared in the Seattle Times.

Authors

      
 
 




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Lessons from Pittsburgh on developing resilient, equitable, sustainable metro economies


On April 16-17, Bruce Katz, vice president and founding director of the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program, traveled to Pittsburgh for the launch of p4: People, Planet, Place, and Performance. The initiative, spearheaded by the Heinz Endowment and the City of Pittsburgh, is committed to putting urban design and economic development to the service of an inclusive society and a sustainable physical infrastructure. The two-day launch event featured urban economic development and design experts from around the globe, with several groups from the Nordic countries--leaders in sustainable architecture and high-tech infrastructure. Below are highlights:

Authors

  • Grace Palmer
Image Source: © Jim Young / Reuters
      
 
 




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2004 Brookings Blum Roundtable: America's Role in the Fight Against Global Poverty


Event Information

July 30-31, 2004

On July 30-31, 2004, more than 40 preeminent international leaders from the public, private, and non-profit sectors came together at the Aspen Institute to discuss "America's Role in the Fight Against Global Poverty" and to set out a forward-looking strategy for the United States.

Co-hosted by Richard C. Blum of Blum Capital Partners LP, the Brookings Institution's Poverty and Global Economy Initiative, the Aspen Institute, and Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative, the group's aim was to explore the dilemma of global poverty from different perspectives, to disaggregate the seemingly intractable problem into more manageable challenges, and to identify key elements of an effective U.S. policy agenda.

With roundtable participants hailing from around the world and representing diverse experiences and approaches, the dialogue was as multifaceted as the challenge of poverty itself. Rather than simply summarize conference proceedings, this essay attempts to weave together the thoughtful exchanges, impassioned calls to action, fresh insights, and innovative ideas that characterized the discussion, and to set the stage for ongoing collaboration in the struggle for human dignity.

Helping to define the issues, share and encourage what works, and build the intellectual framework for such an enterprise will be the guiding mission of the Richard C. Blum Roundtable in the years ahead.


View the full report »
View the conference agenda »
View the participant list »

     
 
 




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2005 Brookings Blum Roundtable: The Private Sector in the Fight Against Global Poverty


Event Information

August 3-6, 2005

From August 3 to 6, 2005, fifty preeminent international leaders from the public, private, and nonprofit sectors came together at the Aspen Institute for a roundtable, "The Private Sector in the Fight against Global Poverty."

The roundtable was hosted by Richard C. Blum of Blum Capital Partners and Strobe Talbott and Lael Brainard of the Brookings Institution, with the active support of honorary cochairs Walter Isaacson of the Aspen Institute and Mary Robinson of Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative. By highlighting the power of the market to help achieve social and economic progress in the world's poorest nations, the roundtable's organizers hoped to galvanize the private, public, and nonprofit sectors to move beyond argument and analysis to action. Put simply, as Brookings president Strobe Talbott explained, the roundtable's work was "brainstorming with a purpose."

With experts hailing from around the world and representing diverse sectors and approaches, the dialogue was as multilayered as the challenge of poverty itself. Rather than summarize the conference proceedings, this essay weaves together the thoughtful observations, fresh insights, and innovative ideas that characterized the discussion. A companion volume, Transforming the Development Landscape: The Role of the Private Sector, contains papers by conference participants, providing in-depth analysis of each conference topic.

View the 2005 report » (PDF)
View the conference agenda »
View the list participants »

     
 
 




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2006 Brookings Blum Roundtable: The Tangled Web - The Poverty-Insecurity Nexus


Event Information

Register for the Event

In a world where borders matter less and where seemingly faraway threats can become immediate problems, the fight against poverty is no longer a matter of just doing the right thing – it is a matter of doing the smart thing to ensure security at home and abroad. As seen across the globe, by exhausting institutions, depleting resources, weakening leaders and crushing hope, extreme poverty fuels instability that often leads to armed conflict and can be a breeding ground for terrorists. The reverse is also true: insecurity stemming from conflict and demographic and environmental challenges makes it harder for leaders, institutions and other stakeholders to address poverty. Simply put, poverty is both a cause of insecurity and a product of it.

To explore this tangled web, in August 2006 the Brookings Blum roundtable discussed the challenges and possible solutions with a diverse group of leaders, including policymakers, business executives and academics, and developed recommendations for change.

2006 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials

2006 Brookings Blum Roundtable Agenda:
  1. Global Poverty, Conflict and Insecurity
  • Susan Rice, The Brookings Institution, "Global Poverty, Weak States and Insecurity"
  • Edward Miguel, University of California, Berkeley, "Global Poverty, Conflict and Insecurity"
  1. Operating in Insecure Environments
  • Jane Nelson, Harvard University, "Operating in Insecure Environments"
  1. Keynote Address: "Achieving Peace in an Inequitable World"
  • James D. Wolfensohn, Chairman of Citigroup International Advisory Board and Former President of the World Bank
  1. The Role of Leadership in Overcoming Poverty & Security in Africa
    Chaired by: Mary Robinson, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative
  • Robert Rotberg, Harvard University, "The Role of Leadership in Overcoming Poverty & Insecurity in Africa"

Leadership Presentations:

    • Mohammed Ibrahim, Chairman, Celtel International
    • John Kachamila, Former Minister, Mozambique
    • Ketumile Masire, Former President of Botswana
  1. Resource and Environmental Insecurity
  • Colin Kahl, University of Minnesota, "Demography, Environment and Civil Strife"
  • Anthony Nyong, University of Jos, Nigeria, "Resource and Environmental Security"
  1. Keynote Address
  • Kemal Dervis, Administrator, United Nations Development Programme
  1. Youth and Conflict
  • Henrik Urdal, The International Peace Research Institute, "The Demographics of Political Violence: Youth Bulges, Insecurity and Conflict"
  • Marc Sommers, Tufts University, "Embracing The Margins: Working with Youth Amidst War and Insecurity"
  • Jane Nelson, Harvard University, "Operating in Insecure Environments: The Youth Demographic"
  1. Transformational Diplomacy and the Route to Security
  • Jennifer Windsor, Freedom House, "Breaking the Poverty-Insecurity Nexus: Is Democracy the Answer?"

Presentations:

    • Philip Zelikow, United States Department of State
    • Madeleine Albright, 64th Secretary of State
    • Mary K. Bush, Chairman, HELP Commission
    • Lael Brainard, The Global Economy and Development Program, The Brookings Institution
      
 
 




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2007 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Development's Changing Face - New Players, Old Challenges, Fresh Opportunities


Event Information

August 1-3, 2007

Register for the Event
From a bureaucratic backwater in the waning days of the Cold War, the fight against global poverty has become one of the hottest tickets on the global agenda. The cozy, all-of-a-kind club of rich country officials who for decades dominated the development agenda has given way to a profusion of mega philanthropists, new bilaterals such as China, "celanthropists" and super-charged advocacy networks vying to solve the world's toughest problems. While philanthropic foundations and celebrity goodwill ambassadors have been part of the charitable landscape for many years, the explosion in the givers' wealth, the messaging leverage associated with new media and social networking, and the new flows of assistance from developing country donors and diasporas together herald a new era of global action on poverty. The new scale and dynamism of these entrants offer hopeful prospects for this continuing fight, even as the new entrants confront some of the same conundrums that official aid donors have grappled with in the past.

On August 1-3, 2007, the Brookings Blum Roundtable gathered representatives reflective of this dynamic landscape to discuss these trends. Through robust discussion and continuing cross-sector partnerships, the conference hopes to foster lasting and widespread improvements in this new field of development.

2007 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials

2007 Brookings Blum Roundtable Agenda:

  1. Fighting Global Poverty: Who'll Be Relevant In 2020?
  2. Angelina, Bono, And Me: New Vehicles To Engage The Public
  3. Leveraging Knowledge For Development
  4. Social Enterprise And Private Enterprise
    Chaired by: Mary Robinson, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative
  5. Africa's Economic Successes: What's Worked And What's Next
    Moderated by: Paul Martin, former Prime Minister of Canada
      Panelists
    • Donald Kaberuka, African Development Bank
    • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, The Brookings Institution
  6. Effecting Change Through Accountable Channels
  7. Global Impact: Philanthropy Changing Development
  8. Keynote Address
    • Former Vice President Al Gore, Generation Investment Management
      
 
 




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2008 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Development in the Balance - How Will the World’s Poor Cope with Climate Change?


Event Information

August 1-3, 2008

Global poverty and climate change are two of the most pressing challenges for global policymakers today, and require policy prescriptions that address their interrelated issues. Effective climate solutions must empower development by improving livelihoods, health and economic prospects while poverty alleviation must become a central strategy for both mitigating emissions and reducing the poor’s vulnerability to climate change.

2008 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials

In its fifth annual gathering, led by Lael Brainard and co-chaired by Strobe Talbott and Richard C. Blum, the Brookings Blum Roundtable addressed the challenges of climate change and development and convened leaders from both the development and climate change communities from August 1-3, 2008, to discuss and debate policy ideas that could benefit both fronts. By examining common challenges—accountability, effective deployment of resources, agenda-setting, mobilizing the public and financial resources, and achieving scale and sustainability—the Roundtable established a solid foundation for collaboration among the climate change and development communities and fostered ideas for policy action.

Keynote Sessions

Keynote Panel: “Noble Nobels: Solutions to Save the Planet”

  • Steven Chu, University of California, Berkeley
  • Al Gore, Generation Investment Management; 45th Vice President of the United States

Keynote Panel: Legal Empowerment of the Poor

  • Mary Robinson, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative
  • Madeline Albright, The Albright Group; Former U.S. Secretary of State

Keynote Panel: “How Do We Achieve Climate Justice?”

  • Kumi Naidoo, CIVICUS and the Global Call to Action Against Poverty
  • Mary Robinson, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative

      
 
 




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2009 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Climate Crisis, Credit Crisis - Overcoming Obstacles to Build a Climate Resilient World


Event Information

July 30 - August 1, 2009

In the midst of a global economic downturn, the world’s climate change negotiators will descend on Copenhagen in December to craft a post-2012 climate regime. But with the timing and impacts of climate change still uncertain—not to mention the ongoing transitions brought about by globalization and the increased cost of capital investment due to weak financial markets—tensions across countries are evident. Policy-makers must now think creatively to realize their goal of revitalizing the global economy through low carbon growth models.

2009 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials

In its sixth annual gathering, led by Kemal Derviş and co-chaired by Strobe Talbott and Richard C. Blum, the Brookings Blum Roundtable convened leaders from the climate change and global development communities from July 30 through August 1, 2009 to discuss and debate policy options to stimulate green, pro-poor growth. By examining the challenges and opportunities policymakers face, the roundtable forged sustainable solutions to solve the climate crisis in a way that revitalizes the global economy and lifts the lives of the poor.

Lunch Briefing: 

“Towards a Global Climate Agreement: Key Insights from Project Catalyst”

    Keynote Sessions:

    “A Blueprint for Transatlantic Climate Cooperation”

      “Compounding Crises: How Can and How Are the Poor Protecting Themselves?”

        “Greening Business: Engaging the Private Sector in Climate Change Solutions”

        • Hal Harvey, ClimateWorks Foundation
        • Thomas Heller, Stanford Law School
        • Moderator: William Antholis, Brookings
        • John Podesta, Center for American Progress
        • Cem Özdemir, German Green Party
        • Moderator: Timothy Wirth, United Nations Foundation
        • Ernest Aryeetey, University of Ghana and Director, Africa Growth Initiative at Brookings
        • Helen Clark, United Nations Development Program
        • Raymond Offenheiser, Oxfam America
        • Moderator: Karen Kornbluh, Center for American Progress
        • Meg McDonald, Alcoa Foundation
        • Jane Nelson, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
        • Glenn Prickett, Conservation International
        • Mark Tercek, the Nature Conservancy
        •       
           
           




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          2010 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Development Assistance Reform for the 21st Century


          Event Information

          August 4-6, 2010

          From high-profile stabilization contexts like Afghanistan to global public health campaigns to a renewed focus on sustainable food security and the looming impacts of climate change, development effectiveness is a central and hotly debated issue. As traditional donors make progress in the international aid effectiveness dialogue, they must increasingly take into account the changing global development landscape and the slew of new actors, including emerging donors, multinational corporations, mega philanthropists, high-profile advocates, and a vocal and energized global public.

          2010 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials

          The seventh annual Brookings Blum Roundtable, led by Kemal Derviş and co-chaired by Richard C. Blum and Strobe Talbott, convened over 40 exceptional international thought leaders, entrepreneurs and practitioners to explore the relationship between efforts to promote aid effectiveness and the anticipated shape of the global development agenda over the next decade. The roundtable discussions provided an opportunity to look beyond questions of increased resources for anti-poverty services to the effectiveness of different approaches and to systemic issues associated with the delivery of development outcomes. The high-level group of participants explored opportunities for new commitment in engaging the private sector and multilateral actors, as well as the increasingly important role of climate assistance and operations in instable arenas. Over separate meal conversations, Dr. Donald Kaberuka, president of the African Development Bank, and Dr. Rajiv Shah, administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), reflected on the current and future roles of their organizations, and how they could each act on the suggestions put forward at the roundtable.

                
           
           




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          2011 Brookings Blum Roundtable: From Aid to Global Development Cooperation


          Event Information

          August 3-5, 2011

          Aspen, Colorado

          Register for the Event

          The context for aid is changing. Globalization has spurred economic convergence, upending the twentieth century economic balance and creating a smaller world where both problems and solutions spill across national borders more readily. This has given rise to a legion of new development actors, including emerging economies, NGOs, private businesses, and coordinating networks, who have brought fresh energy and resources to the field while rendering the prospect of genuine donor coordination ever more difficult. Global integration and competition for resources has raised the prominence of global public goods, whose equitable and sustainable provision requires international collective action. Meanwhile, poor countries are demanding a new form of partnership with the international community, built upon the principles of country ownership and mutual accountability.

          2011 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials

          From G-20 meetings and the upcoming High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Korea to unfolding events in the Middle East and North Africa, leadership from the United States is crucial, placing pressure on the Obama administration to deliver on its promise of far-reaching reforms to U.S. global development efforts. And amidst this shifting global landscape is the issue of effectively communicating the importance of global development cooperation to both a national and global public, at a time when budget pressures are being felt across many of the world’s major economies

          At the eighth annual Brookings Blum Roundtable, co-chaired by Kemal Derviş and Richard C. Blum, 50 thought-leaders in international development came together to discuss a new role for global development cooperation, one that employs inclusive and innovative approaches for tackling contemporary development problems and that leverages the resources of a large field of actors.


          Roundtable Agenda

          Wednesday, August 3, 2011

          Welcome: 8:40 a.m. – 9:00 a.m.
          Open Remarks
          • Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of the Blum Center for 
          Developing Economies at Berkeley
          • Mark Suzman, Global Development Program, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
          • Kemal Derviş, Global Economy and Development, Brookings

          Statement of Purpose, Scene Setter, Comments on the Agenda
          • Homi Kharas, Brookings

          Session I: 9:00AM - 10:30AM
          Reframing Development Cooperation
          In almost any discussion of international development, foreign aid takes center stage. But while 
          aid can certainly be a catalyst for development, it does not work in isolation. Participants will 
          discuss the key objectives of development cooperation, consider what measures of development 
          cooperation are most valuable for recipients, and explore an effective balance of roles and 
          responsibilities - including both public and private players - in today’s evolving development 
          landscape.

          Moderator
          • Walter Isaacson, Aspen Institute

          Introductory Remarks
          • Owen Barder, Center for Global Development
          • Donald Kaberuka, African Development Bank Group
          • Ananya Roy, University of California, Berkeley
          • Elizabeth Littlefield, Overseas Private Investment Corporation

          Session II: 10:50AM - 12:20PM
          The G-20's Development Agenda
          Last year’s G-20 meeting in Seoul marked the first time the group formally took up the issue of development. There they announced the Seoul Development Consensus for Shared Growth and the Multi-Year Action Plan for Development: two far-reaching policies which are expected to guide the G20’s future agenda. What is the G-20’s comparative advantage vis-à-vis development, and how can the group’s development efforts be strengthened and supported?

          Moderator
          • Mark Suzman, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

          Introductory Remarks
          • Alan Hirsch, The Presidency, South Africa
          • Suman Bery, International Growth Centre
          • Homi Kharas, Brookings

          Dinner Program: 6:00PM - 9:00PM
          A Conversation with Al Gore and Mary Robinson

          Topic: "Energy Security and Climate Justice"

          Moderator
          • Kemal Derviş, Global Economy and Development, Brookings


          Thursday, August 4, 2012 

          Session III9:00AM - 10:30AM 
          The Road to Buscan
          In November, participants from over 150 countries, including ministers of developing and developed countries, heads of bilateral and multilateral development institutions, and civil society representatives, will take part in the fourth High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Busan, South Korea. The forum is intended to take account of the development community’s progress in achieving greater impact through aid and to redefine the aid effectiveness agenda to adjust to a changing global landscape. What would constitute success or failure at Busan?

          Moderator
          • Raymond Offenheiser, Oxfam America

          Introductory Remarks
          • J. Brian Atwood, Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development, 
          Development Assistance Committee 
          • Wonhyuk Lim, Korean Development Institute
          • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, World Bank 
          • Steven Radelet, U.S. Agency for International Development 

          Session IV: 10:50AM - 12:20PM 
          Lessons from the Middle East on Governance and Aid
          Popular protests across the Middle East against authoritarian regimes have prompted reflection 
          on the role of aid to non-democratic and poorly governed countries. Some critics believe that aid 
          should only be given to relatively well-governed countries where it is more likely to be effective, 
          but for others, this amounts to collective punishment for the people who suffer under such 
          governments. Do aid allocation models need to change and what role can the development 
          community now play in supporting peaceful, democratic reform in the Middle East?

          Moderator
          • Madeleine K. Albright, Albright Stonebridge Group

          Introductory Remarks
          • Ragui Assaad, University of Minnesota
          • Sheila Herrling, Millennium Challenge Corporation
          • Tarik Yousef, Silatech

          Lunch Program: 12:30PM - 2:00PM
          A Conversation with Thomas R. Nides, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State for Management and Resources

          Moderator
          • Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of the Blum Center for Developing Economies at Berkeley


          Friday, August 5, 2012 

          Session V: 9:00AM - 10:30AM
          Implementing U.S. Development Reforms 

          The end of 2010 saw the completion of two major policy reviews in Washington concerned with 
          international development: the Presidential Policy Directive on Global Development and the 
          Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review. Progress on implementation has been 
          significant in many respects and meager in others. Additionally, despite directives to deliver on 
          many valuable priorities for improvement, essential components of fundamental reform are still 
          in need of address. Casting a shadow across the exercise, or alternatively serving as a spur to 
          focus, the budget environment has soured.

          Moderator
          • Jim Kolbe, German Marshall Fund of the United States

          Introductory Remarks
          • Rajiv Shah, U.S. Agency for International Development
          • Samina Ahmed, International Crisis Group
          • Robert Mosbacher, Jr., Mosbacher Energy Company

          Session VI: 10:50AM - 12:20PM
          Communicating Development Cooperation
          Public interest in and support for aid matter. Yet in many aid giving countries, there is 
          widespread cynicism as to what end aid programs serve and ignorance as to what activities they 
          actually involve. What are the best examples of development efforts which have been 
          communicated successfully and what can we learn from this to shore up support for 
          development cooperation now and in the future?

          Moderator 
          • Liz Schrayer, U.S. Global Leadership Coalition

          Introductory Remarks 
          • Steven Kull, Program on International Policy Attitudes
          • Joshua Bolten, ONE
          • S. Shankar Sastry, University of California, Berkeley
          • Jack Leslie, Weber Shandwick

          Closing Remarks: 12:20PM- 12:30PM
          • Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of the Blum Center for 
          Developing Economies at Berkeley
          • Kemal Derviş, Global Economy and Development, Brookings

          Public Event: 4:00PM - 5:30PM
          Brookings and the Aspen Institute present “Development as National Security?”: A Conversation with Rajiv Shah, U.S. Agency for International Development; Sylvia Mathews Burwell, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; Richard J. Danzig, Center for a New American Security; and Susan C. Schwab, University of Maryland.

          Moderator
          • Jessica Tuchman Mathews, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

          Welcome and Introductions
          • Kemal Derviş, Brookings

          Hosts
          • Richard C. Blum and Senator Dianne Feinstein

                
           
           




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          2012 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Innovation and Technology for Development


          Event Information

          August 1-3, 2012

          Aspen, Colorado

          On August 1-3, 2012, Brookings Global Economy and Development hosted the ninth annual Brookings Blum Roundtable on Global Poverty in Aspen, Colorado. The year’s roundtable theme, "Innovation and Technology for Development", brought together global leaders, entrepreneurs and practioners to discuss how technology and innovation can be seized to help solve some of the world's most pressing global development challenges.

          2012 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials

          Global development challenges are of massive scale: 61 million children out of school and many more failing to learn basic literacy and numeracy skills; 850 million facing hunger; 1 billion living in slums and 1.3 billion without access to electricity. Yet remarkably little is understood about successful strategies for designing scalable solutions, the impediments to reaching scale, or the most appropriate pathways for getting there.

          However, a batch of new technologies offers the promise of a breakthrough by encouraging innovative business models, pushing down transaction costs and disintermediating complex activities. Mobile money could realistically reach over 1 billion poor people in the next decade and directly connect millions of rich individuals with millions of poor people. Real-time data can allow resources to be better targeted and managed. New media can sharpen accountability and reduce waste and overlap.

           

          Roundtable Agenda

          Wednesday, August 1, 2012

          Welcome: 8:40AM - 9:00AM
          Brookings Welcome
          Strobe Talbott, Brookings

          Opening Remarks
          Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of the Blum Center for Developing Economies at Berkeley
          Mark Suzman, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
          Kemal Derviş, Global Economy and Development, Brookings

          Session I: 9:00AM - 10:30AM
          Framing Session: Translating Technological Innovations into Transformational Impact
          In this opening discussion, participants will explore the overarching questions for the roundtable: If the poor can readily be identified and if they have access to financial services and participate in technology-driven communication networks, how does this change the development paradigm? How can effective partnerships be forged to combine the efforts of different international and local actors (businesses, governments, foundations, NGOs, and universities) in propagating solutions? Can scalable technologies raise the profile and potential of new business models, approaches and partnerships?

          Moderator
          Homi Kharas, Brookings

          Introductory Remarks
          • Thomas A. Kalil, White House Office of Science and Technology
          Michael Kubzansky, Monitor Group 
          • Lalitesh Katragadda, Google India
          • Smita Singh, Independent

          Session II: 10:50AM - 12:20PM
          Mobile Money and Mass Payments
          Participants will explore the following questions for the rountable: Is the rapid uptake of mobile money/payment technology throughout the developing world assured and if not, what (or whom) are the impediments? What is required to enable successful mass payments systems that employ mobile money technology? What is the optimal role of government, non-profits and private actors in supporting mobile money services? How can mass payments systems be used to implement national safety nets?

          Moderator
          Gillian Tett, Financial Times

          Introductory Remarks
          Neal Keny-Guyer, Mercy Corps
          Mwangi Kimenyi, Brookings
          Mung Ki Woo, MasterCard Worldwide Group Executive Mobile

          Dinner Program: 7:30PM - 9:15PM
          Aspen Institute Madeleine K. Albright Global Development Lecture


          Featuring
          Rajiv Shah, Administrator, United States Agency for International Development

          Click here to read Rajiv Shah's remarks »


          Thursday, August 2, 2012 

          Session III: 9:00AM - 10:30AM 
          Mass Networks: Leveraging Information from the Crowd
          Participants will explore the following questions for the rountable: What are the most promising examples of using social media, crowdsourcing and “big data” to advance development and humanitarian outcomes? How can traditional foreign assistance make use of virtual networks to support transparency, democratic governance and improved service delivery? How can technologies be used to understand clients, promote beneficiary feedback and learning to fine tune business models in base of the pyramid markets?

          Moderator
          Walter Isaacson, Aspen Institute

          Introductory Remarks
          Anne-Marie Slaughter, Princeton University
          Juliana Rotich, Ushahidi
          • Robert Kirkpatrick, UN Global Pulse Initiative
          Rakesh Rajani, Twaweza

          Session IV: 10:50AM - 12:20PM
          Innovation and Technology for Green Growth
          Participants will explore the following questions for the rountable: How advanced is green growth technology vis-à-vis the scale and urgency of the global climate challenge? What is the role of pricing and intellectual property and push and pull mechanisms in speeding up propagation within developed and developing markets? How can the goal of “sustainable energy for all” be achieved, and is it feasible in all countries?

          Moderator
          Al Gore, The Climate Reality Project

          Introductory Remarks
          Mary Robinson, Mary Robinson Foundation - Climate Justice
          Helen Clark, United Nations Development Programme
          • Arthur Njagi, International Finance Corporation
          Viswanathan Shankar, Standard Chartered Bank

          Lunch Program: 12:30PM - 2:00PM
          Partnering with Academic Research Institutions
          This discussion will explore partnerships between public sector development institutions and academic research institutions to support global development goals. Topics will include the constraints to research; how to make research more relevant to developing country problems; issues around incentives for scientists and universities; and relationships between universities, financiers and implementers.

          Moderator
          • Javier Solana, ESADE

          Panel
          Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of the Blum Center for Developing Economies at Berkeley
          Luis Alberto Moreno, Inter-American Development Bank
          Shankar Sastry, University of California, Berkeley
          Alex Deghan, United States Agency for International Development


          Friday, August 3, 2012 

          Session V: 9:00AM - 10:30AM
          Business Solutions and Private Sector Development
          Participants will explore the following questions for the rountable: What role can the new breed of socially conscious private actors (e.g., social enterprises and impact investors) play in overcoming finance and delivery constraints and scaling up development impact? Where is the need for investment finance most acute, and who or what can fill these gaps? How are management approaches evolving to suit base of the pyramid markets? What are the impediments to the adoption or adaptation of scalable technologies by developing country enterprises, and are southern innovations being efficiently spread? What is constraining private sector development in Africa, and is technology a key bottleneck?

          Moderator
          Laura Tyson, University of California, Berkeley

          Introductory Remarks
          Rob Mosbacher, Mosbacher Energy Company
          • Mathews Chikaonda, Press Corporation Limited
          Elizabeth Littlefield, Overseas Private Investment Corporation
          Amy Klement, Omidyar Network

          Session VI: 10:50AM - 12:20PM
          Delivering U.S. Leadership: Role for the Public Sector
          Participants will explore the following questions for the rountable: What is an appropriate role for the U.S. government in promoting technological solutions for development and scaling these up? How should the government leverage new private sector players? What are the best examples of, and lessons learned from, earlier and on-going public private partnerships? How can the U.S. government work more effectively to support local innovation and technology in developing countries?

          Moderator
          Sylvia Burwell, Walmart Foundation

          Introductory Remarks
          • Rajiv Shah, Administrator, United States Agency for International Development
          Sam Worthington, InterAction
          Henrietta Fore, Holsman International

          Closing Remarks: 12:20PM - 12:30PM

           Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of the Blum Center for Developing Economies at Berkeley
          Kemal Derviş, Global Economy and Development, Brookings

          Lunch Program: 12:30PM - 2:00PM
          A Conversation with Michael Froman and Thomas Nides
          This conversation will focus on the politics and finance of the US government’s efforts on global development, including its specific initiatives regarding technology and innovation for development.

          Moderator
          Madeleine K. Albright, Albright Stronebridge Group

          Live Webcast Event: 4:00PM - 5:30PM
          Brookings and the Aspen Institute Present: "A Conversation with Former World Bank President Robert Zoellick"

          Global Economy and Development at Brookings and the Aspen Strategy Group will host Robert Zoellick, who recently stepped down as president of the World Bank after serving in that office for the past five years. Mr. Zoellick has held several senior positions in the U.S. Government, including deputy secretary of state and U.S. trade representative under President George W. Bush. This event will be webcast live on the Brookings website. Click here for more details.

          Introduction
          R. Nicholas Burns, Director, Aspen Strategy Group and Professor of the Practice of Diplomacy and International Politics, Harvard Kennedy School of Government

          Moderator
          Strobe Talbott, President, Brookings

                
           
           




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          2013 Brookings Blum Roundtable: The Private Sector in the New Global Development Agenda


          Event Information

          August 4-6, 2013

          Aspen, Colorado

          Lifting an estimated 1.2 billion people from extreme poverty over the next generation will require robust and broadly-shared economic growth throughout the developing world that is sufficient to generate decent jobs for an ever-expanding global labor force. Innovative but affordable solutions must also be found to meet people’s demand for basic needs like food, housing, a quality education and access to energy resources. And major investments will still be required to effectively address global development challenges, such as climate change and child and maternal health.  On all these fronts, the private sector, from small- and medium-sized enterprises to major global corporations, must play a significant and expanded role.

          On August 4-6, 2013, Brookings Global Economy and Development is hosting the tenth annual Brookings Blum Roundtable on Global Poverty in Aspen, Colorado. This year’s roundtable theme, “The Private Sector in the New Global Development Agenda,” brings together global leaders, entrepreneurs, practitioners and public intellectuals to discuss how the contribution of the private sector be enhanced in the push to end poverty over the next generation and how government work more effectively with the private sector to leverage its investments in developing countries. 

          Roundtable Agenda

          Sunday, August 4, 2013

          Welcome: 8:40AM - 9:00AM MST
          Brookings Welcome
          Strobe Talbott, Brookings

          Opening Remarks
          Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of 
          the Blum Center for Developing Economies at UC Berkeley
          Julie Sunderland, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
          Kemal Derviş, Global Economy and Development, Brookings

          Session I: 9:00AM - 10:30AM MST
          Framing Session: Reimagining the Role of the Private Sector
          In this opening discussion, participants will explore the overarching questions for the roundtable: How can the contribution of the private sector be enhanced in the push to end poverty over the next generation? What are the most effective mechanisms for strengthening private sector accountability? How can business practices and norms be encouraged that support sustainable development and job creation? How can business build trust in its contributions to sustainable development?

          Moderator
          Nancy Birdsall, Center for Global Development

          Introductory Remarks
          • Homi Kharas, Brookings Institution
          Viswanathan Shankar, Standard Chartered Bank
          Shannon May, Bridge International Academies


          Session II: 10:50AM - 12:20PM MST
          Private Equity
          Participants will explore the following questions for the roundtable: What are the constraints to higher levels of private equity in the developing world, including in non-traditional sectors? How can early-stage investments be promoted to improve deal flow? How can transaction costs and technical assistance costs be lowered?

          Moderator
          Laura Tyson, University of California, Berkeley

          Introductory Remarks
          Robert van Zwieten, Emerging Markets Private Equity Association
          Runa Alam, Development Partners International
          Vineet Rai, Aavishkaar

          Dinner Program: 6:45PM - 9:15PM MST
          Aspen Institute Madeleine K. Albright Global Development Lecture


          Featuring
          Dr. Paul Farmer, Chief Strategist and Co-Founder, Partners in Health


          Monday, August 5, 2013

          Session III: 9:00AM - 10:30AM MST
          Goods, Services and Jobs for the Poor
          Participants will explore the following questions for the roundtable: In what areas are the most promising emerging business models that serve the poor arising? What are the major obstacles in creating and selling profitable, quality, and beneficial products to the poor and how can they be overcome? What common features distinguish successful and replicable solutions?

          Moderator
          Mary Robinson, Mary Robinson Foundation

          Introductory Remarks
          • Ashish Karamchandani, Monitor Deloitte
          • Chris Locke, GSMA
          • Ajaita Shah, Frontier Markets
          • Hubertus van der Vaart, SEAF


          Session IV: 10:50AM - 12:20PM MST
          Blended Finance
          Participants will explore the following questions for the roundtable: Can standard models of blended finance deliver projects at a large enough scale? How can leverage be measured and incorporated into aid effectiveness measures? Should governments have explicit leverage targets to force change more rapidly and systematically?

          Moderator
          Henrietta Fore, Holsman International

          Introductory Remarks
          Elizabeth Littlefield, OPIC
          • Ewen McDonald, AusAID
          Laurie Spengler, ShoreBank International 

          Tuesday, August 6, 2013 

          Session V: 9:00AM - 10:30AM MST
          Unlocking Female Entrepreneurship
          Participants will explore the following questions for the roundtable: How is the global landscape for female entrepreneurship changing? What types of interventions have the greatest ability to overturn barriers to female entrepreneurship in the developing world? Who, or what institutions, should lead efforts to advance this agenda? Can progress be made without a broader effort to end economic discrimination against women?

          Moderator
          • Smita Singh, Independent

          Introductory Remarks
          Dina Powell, Goldman Sachs
          Carmen Niethammer, IFC
          Randall Kempner, ANDE

          Session VI: 10:50AM - 12:20PM MST
          U.S. Leadership and Resources to Engage The Private Sector
          Participants will explore the following questions for the roundtable: How can U.S. foreign assistance be strengthened to more effectively promote the role of the private sector? How can U.S. diplomacy support private sector development in the emerging economies and multinational enterprises investing in the developing world? What can the US do to promote open innovation platforms?

          Moderator
          George Ingram, Brookings

          Introductory Remarks
          • Sam Worthington, InterAction
          John Podesta, Center for American Progress
          Rajiv Shah, USAID

          Closing Remarks
           Richard C. Blum, Blum Capital Partners, LP and Founder of the Blum Center for Developing Economies at Berkeley
          Kemal Derviş, Global Economy and Development, Brookings

          Public Event: 4:30PM - 6:00PM MST
          Brookings and the Aspen Institute Present: "America's Fiscal Health and its Implications for International Engagement"
          Global Economy and Development at Brookings and the Aspen Institute will host the 66th U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development Rajiv Shah for a discussion on the current state of the U.S.'s fiscal health and its impact on American diplomatic and development priorities. Moderated by Ambassador Nicholas Burns, Director, Aspen Strategy Group.

          Moderator
          Nicholas Burns, Director, Aspen Strategy Group

          Panelists
          Condoleezza Rice, 66th United States Secretary of State
          Rajiv Shah, Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development

           

          Event Materials

                
           
           




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          2014 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Jump-Starting Inclusive Growth in the Most Difficult Environments


          Event Information

          August 7-9, 2014

          Aspen, Colorado

          The start of the 21st century has been an auspicious period for global economic development. In the 1990s, a mere 13 emerging economies succeeded in growing at a speed at least twice that of the OECD countries, enabling rapid convergence on Western living standards. By the first decade of the 2000s, this number had mushroomed to 83. Accelerated rates of economic growth lay behind many of the recent success stories in global development, not least the fulfilment of the first Millennium Development Goal to halve the global poverty rate, five years ahead of the 2015 deadline. Yet in a number of places, growth has failed to take off, has undergone periodic reversals, or has benefited a few while leaving the majority short-changed.

          On August 7-9, 2014, Brookings Global Economy and Development is hosting the eleventh annual Brookings Blum Roundtable on Global Poverty in Aspen, Colorado. This year’s roundtable theme, “Jump-Starting Inclusive Growth in the Most Difficult Environment,” brings together global leaders, entrepreneurs, practitioners, and public intellectuals to discuss what strategies exist for promoting inclusive economic growth in settings where standard prescriptions are not feasible or sufficient as well as what the comparative advantages are of different actors seeking to improve the prospects for inclusive growth and how can they most effectively collaborate with each other to increase their impact. 

          This event is closed, but you can follow along on Twitter using #Blum2014.



          Roundtable Agenda


          Thursday, August 7, 2014

          Welcome - 3:30-4:00 p.m.:

          • Strobe Talbott, Brookings Institution

          Opening Remarks:

          Session I - 4:00-5:00 p.m.: How Can Multinationals Engage With Governments to Support Economic Development?

          Multinational corporations are increasingly recognized as key partners for governments in development planning. Corporations are brought into discussions at various levels: around individual projects and their impact on affected localities; on sector performance, regulation and competition; and on country-level issues such as the business environment, infrastructure, jobs, and skills.

          What motivations do multinationals have to participate in government engagement? Do discussions work better under formalized and multilateral structures, such as business councils, or on an ad-hoc bilateral basis? How does engagement differ in poor and weakly governed countries?    

          Moderator:

          Introductory Remarks:

          • Jane Nelson, Harvard University
          • Tara Nathan, MasterCard Worldwide
          • The Honorable Amara Konneh, Government of Liberia

          Aspen Institute Madeleine K. Albright Global Development Dinner & Lecture - 7:00-9:30 p.m.:

          The Aspen Institute Madeleine K. Albright Global Development Lecture recognizes an exceptional individual whose vision has provided breakthrough thinking to tackle the challenges of global development.

          Featuring: 


          Friday, August 8, 2014

          Session II - 9:00 - 10:30 a.m.: Managing Risks in Conflict Settings

          Ending extreme poverty over the next generation will require inclusive and sustained growth across the developing world. This is a particularly onerous challenge in fragile and conflict-affected states, which account for a growing share of the world’s poor. There is growing recognition that fast economic recovery, and the jobs that go with it, can serve to shore up peace agreements and help countries successfully transition beyond the immediate post-conflict phase.

          What can be done to support investors and entrepreneurs weighing up the risks and opportunities of starting or expanding business in these settings? What risk-mitigating instruments and strategies work? How can corporations identify, foster and partner with local businesses to support job creation and private sector development?

          Moderator:

          Introductory Remarks:


          Session III - 10:50-12:00 p.m.: Leap-Frogging Technologies

          Weak legal and regulatory frameworks, crime and corruption, deficient infrastructure, and lack of access to finance are common constraints to many developing economies. New leap-frogging technologies offer poor countries the potential to overcome some of these challenges without the cost, capacity or good governance required from traditional solutions. Mobile technology, powered by nearly five billion mobile subscriptions worldwide, provides a platform through which to do business and expand financial services. Off-grid power and the internet offer other examples of how weak infrastructure and missing public goods can be circumvented. Special economic zones and charter cities offer the possibility of forging oases where economic conditions are favorable.

          On what conditions, if any, does successful leap-frogging depend? What type of financing instruments do innovators look for when designing and marketing such technologies? What are the sources of growth in low-income countries and what can they tell us about new growth strategies?

          Moderator:

          Introductory Remarks:


          Session IV - 2:00-3:30 p.m.: Delivering Government Partnerships

          With President Obama’s June 2013 announcement of Power Africa, the U.S. government is demonstrating its new vision for development built on public-private partnerships. Historically, such partnerships have a mixed tracked record.

          How can we make sure that Power Africa, Feed the Future, and similar partnerships deliver to their full potential? What have we learned about structuring effective government-business-donor cooperation?

          Moderator:

          • Dana Hyde, Millennium Challenge Corporation

          Introductory Remarks:


          Saturday, August 9, 2014

          Session V - 9:00-10:30 a.m.: Unlocking Big Deals

          Massive infrastructure gaps in the energy, transport, information and communications technology, water, and urban sectors threaten the long-term competitiveness and prospects for sustainable development across many countries. This realization has spurred interest from countries, donors, regional groups and development finance institutions to devise new ways of overcoming constraints to mega-investment deals, particularly agreements that are cross-border in scope. Identified constraints include a shortage of early-stage project development finance; skilled legal, technology and financial experts; and instruments to attract additional capital from external players like institutional investors and international investment banks.

          How can constraints to big deals be overcome, and what are the ingredients that allow for enduring partnerships to deliver on these projects? Are dedicated pools of financing needed to unlock these deals?

          Moderator:

          Introductory Remarks:

          Session VI - 10:50-12:20 p.m.: Where Can Enclave Projects Take Us?

          Recent discoveries of natural resource wealth in East Africa offer the promise of supercharged growth in one of the world’s poorest regions. A critical challenge is to leverage the capital, skills and knowledge generated from enclave growth to support nascent other industries.

          How can corporations, government, and NGOs support structural transformation away from enclave activities? What sorts of industries present the most feasible small steps away from extractive sector activities?

          Moderator:

          • Smita Singh, Independent 
          Introductory Remarks:

          Closing Remarks:

          Event Materials

                
           
           




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          2015 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Disrupting development with digital technologies


          Event Information

          August 5-7, 2015

          Aspen, Colorado

          The emergence of a new digital economy is changing the ways in which businesses and development organizations engage in emerging and developing countries. Transaction costs have been radically driven down, enabling greater inclusion. And technology is driving efficiency improvements, and permitting rapid scaling-up and transformational change.

          On August 5-7, 2015, Brookings Global Economy and Development is hosting the twelfth annual Brookings Blum Roundtable on Global Poverty in Aspen, Colorado. This year’s roundtable theme, “Disrupting development with digital technologies,” brings together global leaders, entrepreneurs, practitioners, and public intellectuals to discuss three trends in particular have the potential to redefine how global development occurs and how efforts will support it over the next 10 years: (1) the growing adoption of digital payments serving people everywhere with near-frictionless transactions; (2) the spread of internet connectivity and digital literacy; and (3) the harnessing of data to better serve the poor and to generate new knowledge.

          This event is closed, but you can follow along on Twitter using #Blum2015.



          Roundtable Agenda


          Wednesday, August 5, 2015

          Welcome and opening remarks - 8:40-9:00 a.m.:

          Session I - 9:00-10:30 a.m.: Realizing the potential of the digital economy

          The digital revolution presents profound opportunities for global development. By integrating poor people into digital networks, the revolution can redefine what it means to be poor, and forge new pathways to prosperity for both individuals and countries.

          What are the challenges in making the digital revolution fully inclusive and scalable—and how can they be lifted? In a full-fledged digital economy, which constraints facing the poor will diminish and which will remain? What risks does the digital economy pose?

          Moderator:

          Introductory remarks:

          • Michael Faye, GiveDirectly, Segovia Technology
          • Tunde Kehinde, African Courier Express
          • Christina Sass, Andela
          • Tariq Malik, National Database and Registration Authority

          Session II - 10:50 - 12:20 p.m.: Global money

          Between 2011 and 2014, 700 million people started a bank account for the first time, representing a giant step toward the World Bank goal of universal financial inclusion by 2020. Meanwhile, the digitalization of payments, spurred in part by 255 mobile money services across the developing world, is pushing the cost of basic financial transactions down toward zero.

          How will an era of global money transform formal and informal business? Which sectors, product markets, and government services have the most to gain and lose from increased market efficiency? What are the consequences for financial regulation?

          Moderator:

          Introductory remarks:

          • Ruth Goodwin-Groen, Better than Cash Alliance
          • Luis Buenaventura, Rebit.ph, Satoshi Citadel Industries
          • Tayo Oviosu, Paga
          • Loretta Michaels, U.S. Department of the Treasury

          Lunch - 12:30-2:00 p.m.

          Cocktail reception and interview - 5:00-7:00 p.m.:

          During the reception, Richard Blum will lead a short discussion with Walter Isaacson and Ann Mei Chang on the topic “Silicon Valley and Innovation for the Developing World,” followed by questions. Remarks begin at 5:30 and will end at 6:15 p.m.

          Thursday, August 6, 2015

          Session III - 9:00-10:30 a.m.: Global connections

          Numerous ventures are competing today to bring internet connectivity to the furthest corners of the planet, while low-cost, user-centered-designed platforms are expanding the spread of digital literacy. Social media and crowdsourcing offer efficient ways for people to share information, solve problems, and act collectively.

          To what extent can internet connectivity overcome isolation and empower poor communities that are socially, economically, and politically disenfranchised? Do the benefits of global connectivity for the world’s poor rely on issues like net neutrality, and what has been learned from recent battles to uphold this paradigm?

          Moderator:

          Introductory remarks:

          Session IV - 10:50-12:20 p.m.: Global knowledge

          The creation of a universal digital network will provide the poor with greater access to the information they need, and generate new knowledge that can be used to serve poor people more effectively. Digital inclusion can expand possibilities for targeting, verification, and analysis, while big data from biometric registries, satellites, phones, payments, and the internet can unlock insights on individual needs and preferences. In addition, open source platforms and MOOCs have the potential to be powerful accelerators for technology and skill transfer.

          What kinds of new personalized services can be developed using improved capacity for targeting and tailoring? How might the reduction of barriers to information affect social mobility and economic convergence? How should big data be regulated?

          Moderator:

          • Smita Singh, President’s Global Development Council

          Introductory remarks:


          Friday, August 7, 2015

          Session V - 9:00-10:30 a.m.: Opportunities and challenges for business

          The digital economy promises to disrupt many existing markets and generate new business opportunities that employ and serve the poor.

          How can businesses employ digital technologies to expand their presence in poor and emerging countries? According to businesses, what is an effective regulatory framework for the digital economy? To what extent can strong digital infrastructure compensate for deficiencies in physical infrastructure or governance?

          Moderator:

          Introductory Remarks:

          • Jesse Moore, M-KOPA Solar
          • Anup Akkihal, Logistimo
          • V. Shankar, formerly Standard Chartered Bank
          • Barbara Span, Western Union

          Session VI - 10:50-12:20 p.m.: Opportunities and challenges for development cooperation

          The U.S. government sees itself as a leader in harnessing technology for global development. Meanwhile, aid agencies have been identified as a possible target for disintermediation by the digital revolution.

          How can development organizations, both government and non-government, accelerate the digital revolution? How might traditional aid programs be enhanced by employing digital knowledge and technologies? Does U.S. regulatory policy on the digital economy cohere with its global development agenda?

          Moderator:

          Introductory remarks:

          Closing remarks:

          Event Materials

                
           
           




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          Unpredictable and uninsured: The challenging labor market experiences of nontraditional workers

          As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. labor market has deteriorated from a position of relative strength into an extraordinarily weak condition in just a matter of weeks. Yet even in times of relative strength, millions of Americans struggle in the labor market, and although it is still early in the current downturn,…

                 




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          Keep independent Israeli action on the table


          While Israeli and Palestinian interests are best served by a negotiated two-state state solution, the peace plan that Sam Bahour proposed in his February post disregards Israel's demographic and security concerns and is tantamount to a Palestinian veto on a negotiated solution. His insistence on the right of return for Palestinian refugees and rejection of security limitations on Palestinian sovereignty in effect asks Israel to become a binational state while creating a militarized Palestinian state alongside it. Bahour rejects the notion of unilateral action, but his case only reinforces my belief that Israel may need to act independently to protect its interests.

          The logic behind the Clinton parameters and President Obama’s peace plan was that in return for the creation of a Palestinian state, Palestinian refugees would relinquish their claim to Israel; the hope was that this would allow for the "two states for two peoples" to exist side-by-side. Yet Bahour rejects compromise on the refugee issue as the forfeiture of “basic components of statehood and basic principles of Israeli-Palestinian peace that are enshrined in international law.” Any peace agreement that both establishes a Palestinian state and recognizes the rights of millions of Palestinians to enter Israel would hasten the end of Israel's Jewish identity.

          Israel's interest in the creation of a Palestinian state is also built upon the assumption that a sound agreement would improve its security rather than threaten it. To this end, Israel has called for a demilitarized Palestinian state, and this has been echoed by the United States, France, the Czech Republic, the European Union, and Australia’s Labor Party. Even Mahmoud Abbas accepted the premise of demilitarization, saying, “We don’t need planes or missiles. All we need is a strong police force.” Nevertheless, Bahour’s piece declares any limitations on the sovereignty of Palestine unacceptable. For Israel, a peace deal that grants one’s adversaries access to more deadly weaponry would be absurd.

          Bahour argues that my strategies for reaching a two-state solution are doomed because they do not meet the "mutual interests" of the parties to the conflict, but his plan does not offer incentives for Israel to make peace.

          Bahour argues that my strategies for reaching a two-state solution are doomed because they do not meet the "mutual interests" of the parties to the conflict, but his plan does not offer incentives for Israel to make peace. His proposal not only fails to improve Israel's situation in any tangible sense, but further endangers it. Rejectionist Palestinian positions like Bahour's (and Abbas's recent dismissal of Biden's initiative) would veto the two-state solution as a means to move towards a single binational state. That is precisely why Israel may need to act independently to keep a two-state solution viable.

          Authors

          • Amos Yadlin
               
           
           




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          Fostering financial inclusion and financial integrity: Brookings roundtable readout


          How can countries support innovative approaches to facilitating access to and usage of formal financial services among low-income and other marginalized groups while mitigating the risk of misuse within the financial sector?

          As part of the Brookings Financial and Digital Inclusion Project (FDIP), the FDIP team recently hosted a roundtable to examine this central question. The objective of the roundtable was to identify and discuss salient challenges and opportunities for financial services providers, government entities, and consumers with respect to balancing anti-money laundering/countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) compliance — a critical component of financial integrity and stability — with inclusive financial access and growth.

          We explore several key questions and themes that emerged from the roundtable below.

          Do areas of synergy exist between financial inclusion and AML/CFT efforts?

          • AML/CFT requirements and financial inclusion have sometimes been perceived as being in tension with one another — for example, stringent “know your customer” (KYC) requirements associated with AML processes can restrict formal financial access among marginalized groups who are unable to fulfill the KYC documentation requirements. However, the objectives of AML/CFT (ensuring stability and integrity within the financial sector) and financial inclusion (providing access to and promoting usage of a broad range of appropriate, affordable financial services) can be mutually reinforcing.
          • By moving individuals from the shadow economy into the formal financial system, greater opportunities emerge for introducing underserved populations to a broad suite of formal financial services, and ensuring those services are accompanied by suitable consumer protections. Thus, financial inclusion, financial integrity, and financial stability can act as complementary objectives.
          • The 2012 Declaration of the Ministers and Representatives of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) recognized financial exclusion as a money laundering and terrorist financing risk in approving FATF’s 2012-2020 Mandate. This mandate affirmed FATF’s 2011 guidance on AML and terrorist financing measures and financial inclusion, which stated that “[i]t is acknowledged at the same time that financial exclusion works against effective AML/CFT policies. Indeed the prevalence of a large informal, unregulated and undocumented economy negatively affects AML/CFT efforts and the integrity of the financial system. Informal, unregulated and undocumented financial services and a pervasive cash economy can generate significant money laundering and terrorist financing risks and negatively affect AML/CFT preventive, detection and investigation/prosecution efforts.”

          What are key challenges and concerns with respect to balancing financial inclusion with financial integrity?

          • Awareness of financial inclusion issues is not universal among individuals who work in the regulatory, compliance, and law enforcement spheres of the financial ecosystem. Engagement among these groups is critical for promoting knowledge-sharing with respect to financial integrity and inclusion.
          • Although FATF and other standard-setting bodies (SSBs) have increasingly adopted recommendations favoring proportionate, risk-based approaches to AML/CFT (as evidenced by the 2013 FATF Guidance on Financial Inclusion), regulators often pursue more conservative approaches than SSB guidelines recommend. These conservative approaches may constrain access to and usage of formal financial services among marginalized groups.
          • Combating the potential use of low-value transfers within countries and across borders for terrorist financing purposes is a salient concern for the law enforcement community when considering proportionate AML/CFT approaches.

          How does the digital component fit into these issues?

          • As its name suggests, FDIP is interested in exploring the evolving role of digital technology within the financial services ecosystem. As discussed in the 2015 FDIP Report, digitization of financial services can be more cost-effective for public and private sector providers to manage and safer for consumers than carrying or storing cash.
          • For example, a 2013 report found that the Mexican government saved about $1.3 billion annually by centralizing and digitizing payments for wages, pensions, and social transfers. A 2014 report by the World Bank Development Research Group, the Better Than Cash Alliance, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation highlighted several countries, including South Africa, where disbursing social transfers electronically cost significantly less than manual cash disbursement.
          • Digital financial services can also promote women’s economic empowerment, as these services are often more private and convenient to access than traveling to a “brick and mortar” financial service provider. Given that as of 2014 there was a 9 percentage point gap between the number of men and women with accounts in developing economies (with women disproportionately excluded from account ownership), facilitating access to formal financial services among the 42 percent of women globally who do not have an account will be a major factor in advancing financial inclusion.
          • With respect to financial integrity in particular, digital identification mechanisms such as biometric IDs can help lower access barriers to financial services while ensuring that providers have the information they need to promote security and stability in the financial ecosystem. In its June 2011 guidance, FATF recognized the use of non-documentary methods of identification verification — for example, a signed declaration from a community leader coupled with a photo taken by a mobile phone — for advancing access to formal financial services among underserved groups.
          • The Aadhaar initiative in India, which the FDIP team referenced in a previous post, is currently the largest biometric identification program in the world. The unique 12-digit ID enables individuals to meet KYC requirements and has been used as a financial account among those who do not have an account with a financial institution. Another innovative digital initiative is underway in Tanzania, where the government is working in concert with mobile carrier Tigo and UNICEF to provide birth certificates via mobile phones.

          What are critical questions and areas of opportunity for fostering financial inclusion and integrity moving forward?

          • How can regulators and providers ensure sufficient privacy protections are in place for customers when advancing financial inclusion efforts, particularly through digital channels?
          • Through what mechanisms can government entities and non-government financial services providers best mitigate the risks of centralizing sensitive customer data?
          • Could an industry utility that facilitates a common solution to AML systems serve as a feasible solution for harmonizing standards?
          • What is the proper role of private solutions in the AML/CFT and financial inclusion spaces?
          • Could identification verification applications be developed using blockchain technology?
          • In what ways can social networks be leveraged with respect to digital identity initiatives and financial inclusion?

          Authors

          Image Source: © Jorge Cabrera / Reuters
                 




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          Health Policy Issue Brief: How to Improve the Medicare Accountable Care Organization (ACO) Program


          Contributors: Alice M. Rivlin and Christine Dang-Vu

          Recent data suggest that Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) are improving important aspects of care and some are achieving early cost savings, but there is a long way to go. Not all ACOs will be successful at meeting the quality and cost aims of accountable care. The private sector has to date allowed more flexibility in terms of varying risk arrangements—there are now over 250 accountable care arrangements with private payers in all parts of the country—with notable success in some cases, particularly in ACOs that have been able to move farther away from fee-for-service payments. Future growth of the Medicare ACO program will depend on providers having the incentives to become an ACO and the flexibility to assume different levels of risk, ranging from exclusively upside arrangements to partial or fully capitated payment models.

          Given that the first three year cycle of Medicare ACOs ends in 2015 and more providers will be entering accountable care in the coming years, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has indicated that they intend to release a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) affecting the Medicare ACO program.

          In anticipation of these coming changes, the Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform has identified the "Top Eight ACO Challenges" that warrant further discussion and considerations for ensuring the continued success of ACOs across the country. To support that discussion, we also present some potential alternatives to current Medicare policies that address these concerns. These findings build on the experiences of the Engelberg Center’s ACO Learning Network members and other stakeholders implementing accountable care across the country.  In some cases, the alternatives might have short-term costs, but could also improve the predictability and feasibility of Medicare ACOs, potentially leading to bigger impacts on improving care and reducing costs over time.  In other cases, the alternatives could lead to more savings even in the short term. In every case, thoughtful discussion and debate about these issues will help lead to a more effective Medicare ACO program.

          Top Eight ACO Challenges

          1. Make technical adjustments to benchmarks and payments
          2. Transition to more person-based payments
          3. Increase beneficiary engagement
          4. Enhance and improve alignment of performance measures
          5. Enable better and more consistent supporting data
          6. Link to additional value-based payment reforms
          7. Develop bonus payments and other incentives to participate
          8. Support clinical transformation

          Downloads

                




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          The State of Accountable Care: Evidence to Date and Next Steps

          Event Information

          October 20, 2014
          9:00 AM - 12:30 PM EDT

          Falk Auditorium
          Brookings Institution
          1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.
          Washington, DC 20036

          Register for the Event

          Over the past few years, more than 600 Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) have formed across the country, charged with the dual goals of improving health while also reducing health care costs. Increasingly, evidence on how public and private ACOs are progressing toward these goals is beginning to emerge. Based on these results, major regulatory changes are anticipated in the months ahead that will impact accountable care programs in Medicare, as well as future uptake within the private sector.

          On October 20, the Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform hosted a half day forum to assess the latest evidence on accountable care, discuss strategies to overcome unique ACO challenges, and provide an overview of accountable care reforms. Sean Cavanaugh of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) provided keynote remarks on the latest Medicare ACO results and potential changes to the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP). Panel sessions featured leading experts in ACO research, implementation and health care policy.

           Join the conversation on Twitter using #ACOFuture or follow @BrookingsMed

          Video

          Audio

          Transcript

          Event Materials

                 




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          Turkey’s unpalatable choices in Syria

          Syria’s northwestern province of Idlib is experiencing a deepening humanitarian crisis. As the Russia-backed Syrian regime pushes to retake this last major enclave of the Syrian opposition, hundreds of thousands of people have fled towards Turkey’s borders. According to the United Nations, 700,000 people have fled Idlib since December 1. As the main backer of…

                 




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          Unpredictable and uninsured: The challenging labor market experiences of nontraditional workers

          As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. labor market has deteriorated from a position of relative strength into an extraordinarily weak condition in just a matter of weeks. Yet even in times of relative strength, millions of Americans struggle in the labor market, and although it is still early in the current downturn,…

                 




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          Unpredictable and uninsured: The challenging labor market experiences of nontraditional workers

          As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. labor market has deteriorated from a position of relative strength into an extraordinarily weak condition in just a matter of weeks. Yet even in times of relative strength, millions of Americans struggle in the labor market, and although it is still early in the current downturn,…

                 




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          The Senate Trial Will Be Totally Predictable—With One Potential for Surprise

                 




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          Internal Displacement and Development Agendas: A Roundtable Discussion with Sadako Ogata


          Event Information

          May 14, 2013
          9:00 AM - 10:30 AM EDT

          St. Louis Room
          The Brookings Institution
          1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
          Washington, DC

          Around the world today, there are more than 15.5 million refugees and over 28.8 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) uprooted by conflict, in addition to some 32.4 million displaced in 2012 from their homes due to natural disasters. These displacement crises are not simply humanitarian concerns, but fundamental development challenges. Forced migration flows are rooted in development failures, and can undermine the pursuit of development goals at local, national and regional levels.

          Linking humanitarian responses to displacement with longer-term development support and planning is not a new concern. Beginning in 1999, for example, the “Brookings Process” – under the leadership of Sadako Ogata and James Wolfensohn – sought to bridge humanitarian relief and development assistance in post-conflict situations. But the challenge remains unresolved, and has acquired new urgency as displacement situations are becoming more protracted, and situations such as the Syrian crisis show no signs of resolution.

          The Brookings Global Economy and Development Program and the Brookings-LSE Project on Internal Displacement held a roundtable on these issues on May 14, 2013 with Sadako Ogata, former UN High Commissioner for Refugees, former Director of the Japanese International Cooperation Agency, and Distinguished Fellow at the Brookings Institution. Megan Bradley, Fellow with the Brookings-LSE Project on Internal Displacement, facilitated the roundtable, which followed Chatham House rules.

          The roundtable addressed several key topics including:

          • The relevance of the concept of human security to addressing displacement and development challenges
          • Displacement as a development challenge in fragile states
          • Protracted displacement
          • Contrasts in the approaches and processes adopted by humanitarian and development actors

          The event report provides a brief overview of the discussion.

          Event Materials

                
           
           




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          The Inequitable Impact of Health Shocks on the Uninsured in Namibia


          ABSTRACT

          The AIDS pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa puts increasing pressure on the buffer capacity of low- and middle-income households without access to health insurance. This paper examines the relationship between health shocks, insurance status and health-seeking behaviour. It also investigates the possible mitigating effects of insurance on income loss and out-of-pocket health expenditure. The study uses a unique dataset based on a random sample of 1769 households and 7343 individuals living in the Greater Windhoek area in Namibia. The survey includes medical testing for HIV infection which allows for the explicit analysis of HIV-related health shocks. We find that the economic consequences of health shocks can be severe for uninsured households even in a country with a relatively well-developed public health care system such as Namibia. The uninsured resort to a variety of coping strategies to deal with the high medical expenses and reductions in income, such as selling assets, taking up credit or receiving financial support from relatives and friends. As HIV-infected individuals increasingly develop AIDS, this will put substantial pressure on the public health care system as well as social support networks. Evidence suggests that private insurance, currently unaffordable to the poor, protects households from the most severe consequences of health shocks.

          Read the full article on Oxford Journals »

          Publication: Oxford Journals
          Image Source: © Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
                
           
           




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          Lucirmás Turns Single Wine Bottles into 3-Piece Table Sets

          Spanish company Lucirmás debuts Pure-Bottle, a fully recycled and recyclable table set which consists of a glass, lantern and spoon.




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          Eco Wine Review: Hahn SLH Estate 2010 Chef's Table Viognier

          Hahn SLH Estate's 2010 Chef's Table Viognier is one of the most interesting whites you'll ever smell. It's completely intoxicating with notes of white peach, banana, honeydew and jasmine. Only 100 cases were made, so get this one quickly!




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          Tiny 355 sq. ft. micro-apartment is expanded with adaptable mini-loft

          A small apartment gets enlarged by knocking some walls down and adding a multi-functional staircase and mini-loft.




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          10 Amazing MRI Stills of Fruits and Vegetables

          Check out these amazing MRI images of our favorite fruits and vegetables.




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          How to freeze summer vegetables

          There’s no need to resort to insipid produce from across the globe once the local growing season has ended.




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          How big business can drive vegetable consumption

          Forty companies just pledged to do their part to serve more veggies, helping the environment in the process.




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          UPP fuel cell gadget charger: Personal portable power from hydrogen (Review)

          This small hydrogen fuel cell charger promises a week of clean power for your gadgets. But is it ready for prime time?