Will the new World Development Report transform our thinking on gender and inequality?

September 19, 2011
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We measure relative poverty in rich countries; absolute poverty in poor ones – what if we combine them?

August 31, 2011
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Is inequality the root cause of global crisis? The World Bank's lead research economist thinks so

August 22, 2011
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The World Bank gender team responds; lessons from successful women's rights coalitions; male attitudes to violence against women: some reading for International Women's Day

March 8, 2011
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300 years of global writing on poverty in one graph

February 3, 2011
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Gender Equality and Development: What will (and won’t) be in the 2012 World Development Report?

January 28, 2011
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The food price crisis and the World Bank's blind spots

January 11, 2011
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Fun with data: the history of the world 1960-2008, and you’re in charge

August 24, 2010
I just spent a happy half hour playing with this – the first of many, I suspect. It’s the latest version of the Hans Rosling/Gapminder graphs that I’ve blogged on before and this one is really user friendly – even I can get it to work. Just click here to start messing around. It allows you to construct a graph
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Guest Blog: World Bank research director critiques the new UN poverty index

July 28, 2010
Martin Ravallion is Director of the World Bank’s research department, the Development Research Group. These are the views of the author, and need not reflect those of the World Bank. “Everyone agrees that poverty is not just about low consumption of market commodities by a household.  There are also important non-market goods, such as access to public services, and there
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New books on development: bad microfinance; climate change and war; what works; inside the World Bank; mobile activism

July 21, 2010
One of the perks of writing a blog is that I can scrounge review copies of development-related books. I’m sure they’re all fascinating and I really want to read them but alas, they don’t come with extra hours in the day attached. So I now have a growing pile by my desk that is in danger of becoming a health
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Guest blog: World Bank chief economist replies on his industrial policy proposals

July 7, 2010
Last week I wrote about Justin Lin’s intriguing suggestions for how developing countries can best pursue a low risk/high return form of industrial upgrading. Here Justin responds to some of the concerns and questions raised in that post: “I am grateful to Duncan Green for his comments on my recent paper “Growth Identification and Facilitation”, which offer me the opportunity
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A surprising World Bank recipe for industrial policy: new proposal from Justin Lin

July 2, 2010
Justin Lin, the World Bank’s chief economist, was in London last week and presented his new paper on ‘Growth Identification and Facilitation’. Two years ago he came through just after being appointed, promising to bring a ‘new perspective’ to the Bank (see post here). His new paper certainly does that, as its subtitle ‘the role of the state in the dynamics
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