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Ideas for growth in developing countries

The IGC promotes sustainable growth in developing countries by providing demand-led policy advice based on frontier research. The IGC is directed and organised from hubs at the LSE and Oxford and comprises country offices across the developing world. The IGC was initiated and funded by UKaid from DFID.


Sierra Leone|The IGC is focusing work on: Private Sector Development and Export Diversification, Financial Sector Development and Agriculture.
Nigeria-Lagos|The IGC and Lagos State are working towards partnership in 2010.
Ghana|The IGC is focussing work on: Macroeconomic stability, Agriculture sector restructuring, Private sector development, Education and skills acquisition, and Natural resource management.
Ethiopia|The IGC work is mainly on agriculture and industrial development.
Uganda|The IGC has provided a rapid response to Uganda on oil revenue management.
Tanzania|The IGC programme is focussed on: Macroeconomic Management for Growth, Public Finance, Growth and Poverty Reduction, Agriculture, Firm Capabilities, and Regional Trade and Infrastructure.
Mozambique|The IGC and Mozambique are working towards building a partnership in 2010.

Pakistan|The IGC priorities are: Macro policy and revenue mobilization; industrial competitiveness and firms; political economy and governance; social services, social protection and poverty reduction; and agricultural development and water issues.
Bangladesh|The IGC is developing a work programme focusing on: governance, non-traditional export prospects beyond garments, rationalization of the tax system, the impact of microcredit, climate change, and urbanisation.
India - State of Bihar|The IGC is focussing on: Building State Capacity, Structural Transformation, and Flood Management.
<b>India</b>|The IGC is developing a partnership with India through 2010.
Rwanda|The IGC and Rwanda are working towards building a partnership in 2010.
Afghanistan|The IGC has responded to a request from the government of Afghanistan to assess the scope for IGC support in fostering economic growth.
Zambia

What we're doing

Remittances provide a significant portion of income in developing countries, but are often not used for the purposes intended by the migrants. Isaac Mbiti (South Methodist University) and Dean Yang (University of Michigan) seek to identify ways of raising the development impact of remittance flows to Africa by granting migrants greater control over how their remittances are spent.

Bilateral and multilateral aid donors spend considerable sums on “Community Driven Development” or “Community Driven Reconstruction”, a programming method whereby affected communities make their own decisions about how project money will be spent. James D. Fearon (Stanford University) are evaluation CDR programming through complete data collection and analysis in 42 candidate communities in Liberia.

Migration is often treated as a nuisance variable in evaluations of the effects of new infrastructure. Taryn Dinkleman and colleagues view them more seriously as outcomes of interest for development economists and policymakers

What we're reading

In the last year, Ethiopia's annual exports recently reached a never-before-seen level of $2 billion, a growth of 38 percent from the year before. Based on recent data on the composition of exports, this note reviews where this growth came from in terms of both supply-side factors (i.e., which commodities showed the largest increases) as well as demand-side contributors (what foreign markets mattered most).

Owen Barder on the need for feedback loops and experiment in development policy

China’s existing “low-carbon cities” are mostly fakes, energy researcher Jiang Kejun tells Liu Jianqiang.