Rachel Glennerster
@rglenner.bsky.social
710 followers 77 following 35 posts
President CGD. Development economist. Passionate about impact, evidence and innovation.🔸10% pledge. Posts=personal views. cgdev.org
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rglenner.bsky.social
I'm doing more @cgdev.org podcast hosting. Listen & give me feedback. Who else would you like to hear me interview?

Here I ask Lord Jim O'Neill & Dr. Bansal about spurring innovation into a diagnostic for sepsis. Why sepsis diagnostic? Why incentives? How best to prompt innovation.
cgdev.org
Neonatal sepsis kills hundreds of thousands of babies each year.

In a new @cgdev.org podcast, CGD working group members Lord Jim O’Neill & Dr. Akhil Bansal join @rglenner.bsky.social to discuss how an advanced market commitment could help tackle the crisis & more. ⬇️
bit.ly/3JAbQAc
rglenner.bsky.social
Jishnu points out India did have world class institutions but they have deteriorated. Zimbabwe saw the biggest increase in education ever sern as soon as the British left. It's not the lack of aid. LMICs have to self fund universities and importantly create academic freedom.
rglenner.bsky.social
Jishnu says most common question he gets at conferences from students is not "how can I work on questions that are relevant and important to LMICs" but "will this question get me a paper in QJE or other top journal"
rglenner.bsky.social
Oriana Bandiera points out that we need to move conferences on development economics so that they happen in LMICs. She has done this and it's been a great success.
rglenner.bsky.social
We need to set up world class institutions on the African continent. Leonard Wantchekon did this by setting up the African School of Economics.
rglenner.bsky.social
Jishnu Das, economics is the most concentrated/monopolistic disciplines.
rglenner.bsky.social
Leonard Wantchekon points out never been African on editorial board of Journal of Development Economics.
rglenner.bsky.social
This is reflected in a mismatch between the problems policy makers in Africa care about and what academics write about.
rglenner.bsky.social
And even fewer papers with coauthors from Africa.
rglenner.bsky.social
Markus Goldstein making the point that there are very few papers in top economics journals on sub Saharan Africa.
rglenner.bsky.social
Arvind Panagarian on whether India can become developed econ by 100 years from independence. Recent trends suggest possible but real challenges incl 46% workforce in agriculture and 40% workers in enterprises in firms with less than 10 workers.
rglenner.bsky.social
As development experts we have pushed nonexperts away, saying it was too complicated for regular people to understand. That is not good for building support. Radically simplifying would help us communicate better and make for more effective aid.
daveevansphd.bsky.social
@rglenner.bsky.social advocates for radically simplifying how we do aid (and how we communicate it).

www.youtube.com/live/uvyFva0... (starts at 10m30s) #ABCDE2025
rglenner.bsky.social
If you are looking for more careful analysis of the impact of the US aid cuts on lives, my colleagues @charlesjkenny.bsky.social and (now ex colleague) @justsand.bsky.social recognize the challenge that aid may crowd in or crowd out other financing. 4/
www.cgdev.org/blog/how-man...
rglenner.bsky.social
I did find it interesting that their estimated impact of US assistance is much higher for HIV and malaria--areas of specific US focus--than for other diseases. Has anyone done this disease specific analysis more appropriately? 3/
rglenner.bsky.social
Authors "control" for things like health expenditure & hospital beds which US funding can directly impact. Why is that bad? One criticism of aid is that it displaces domestic spending. By "controlling" for health spend you are ruling out crowding out. However......2/
rglenner.bsky.social
Finally read the @thelancet.com article claiming US foreign assistance cuts will lead to 14mill deaths up to 2030 which has garnered much media attention. It's problematic to say the least, X-country regression with mortality on left and US spending per head on right. 1/ 🧵
rglenner.bsky.social
thanks, that makes slightly more sense but still surprised its that high on the list
rglenner.bsky.social
Does anyone know how and why Sierra Leone is on this list of countries from which travel to US is partially restricted because of concerns about terrorism? I can think of a lot of countries with much worse levels of terrorism.
rglenner.bsky.social
Donors are facing tough choices on which education funds to support in the coming months and by how much. @leecrawfurd.bsky.social and I set out some criteria for how to prioritize funding.
leecrawfurd.bsky.social
New blog: @rglenner.bsky.social & I suggest 4 criteria for donors choosing between multilateral education funds (eg GPE/ECW/IDA/IFFED/UNICEF/UNESCO)

1. Cost-effective interventions
2. Foundational literacy & numeracy
3. Poor countries
4. Financial & policy leverage

www.cgdev.org/blog/four-cr...
Reposted by Rachel Glennerster
Reposted by Rachel Glennerster
rglenner.bsky.social
@cgdev.org we have produced a lot of analysis showing the impact of USAID cuts.

In a new initiative, a team is identifying some of the most cost-effective exUSAID programs that can still be rescued and match them with donors willing to fund them.
www.npr.org/sections/goa...
A matchmaking service with a twist: Connecting big givers to programs cut by USAID
A former USAID worker has a new mission. She's hoping to connect philanthropists with overseas programs that have lost — or are likely to lose — their U.S. funding.
www.npr.org