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Tag Archives: Ha-Joon Chang
The Rule-Based International Order: Discourse and Reality in East Asia (short version)
The rule-based international order or the liberal international order, has recently garnered increasing attention recently. This post-World War II order is generally defined as a free open market, trade and liberal globalization system. Such an order has been argued to … Continue reading
Links for Thought 12
1) The Real Hamilton: What’s Not to Love? A Bloomberg article that talks about Alexander Hamilton, one of the very early US Treasury Secretaries, and how his ideas to grow the US economy then wouldn’t be accepted by the mainstream … Continue reading
Posted in Economic Thought, Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, Least Developed Countries, Overseas Development Institute, Posts, Poverty Reduction, SDGs, sustainable development goals
Tagged AIIB, anti-corruption, anti-corruption summit, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, BRICS, CAR, Central African Republic, Conflict, Corruption, Development Bank, Development Finance, EBRD, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Ha-Joon Chang, IDS, Institute for Development Studies, institutions, International Development, Joseph Stiglitz, Mushtaq Khan, Ngaire Woods, ODA, ODI, Official Development Assistance, offshore finance, Overseas Development Institute, SDGs, sustainable development goals
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What’s ODA? It’s definition has been changed…
I was about to write Part 3 of the 2015 SDSR when this news release appeared. In summary, the UK along with others Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development Development Assistance (OECD-DAC) have altered the definition of Official Assistance (ODA). … Continue reading
Posted in Andrew Mitchell, DFID, International Development, Justine Greening, Official Development Assistance, Posts
Tagged 2010, Andrew Mitchell, communique, conflict states, defintion, Department for International Development, DFID, extremism, foreign aid, fragile states, Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, ODA, OECD, OECD-DAC, Official Development Assistance, OOF, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development-Development Assistance Committee, Other Official Flows, private sector, public sector
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The NSS 2015 & the SDSR 2015: The “Development” parts Part 2
Another also quite obvious development initiative proposed was to continue developing global or international development arena is brought up on page 48, paragraph 5.9 which states that the UK has and will continue to play a leading role in the … Continue reading
Posted in David Cameron, DFID, International Development, International Trade, Least Developed Countries, MDGs, Official Development Assistance, Posts, Poverty Reduction, SDGs
Tagged bad Samaritan, Corruption, David Cameron, golden thread, Ha-Joon Chang, Human Rights, International Development, Joseph Stiglitz, Kicking Away the Ladder, MDGs, Millennium Development Goals, post 2015, post-MDG goals, post-MDGs, post-Washington Consensus, Poverty Redution Strategy Papers, PRSPs, rule of law, SDSR, SDSR 2015, Simon Maxwell, sustainable development goals, UN High-level panel, Washington Consensus, World Bank
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Links for thought 11
Haven’t done this series in a while so here we go: 1) Jin Liqun: From the lines of Lord Byron to AIIB’s corridors of power A Devex article on Jin Liqun,the first leader of the recently created, non-Western dominated, non-neoliberal … Continue reading
Posted in Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, MDGs, SDGs
Tagged 2030, Africa, AIIB, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, Christine Lagarde, Conflict, Conflict Pool, CSSF, Department for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik, DFAT, DIE, fragile states, German Development Institute, Ha-Joon Chang, IMF, IMF Managing Director, International Monetary Fund, Jin Liqun, Malala, Malala Yousafzai, Malcolm Turnbull, MDGs, Migration, Millennium Development Goals, minister for international development and the Pacific, Phil Vernon, post-MDG goals, SDGs, Stability and Security Fund, Steve Ciobo, sustainable development goals, Telegraph, Tony Abbott, UN, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States Agency for International Development, USAID
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Links for Thought 9
After a while, here are some links for thought Continue reading
Posted in Alan Duncan, Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Joseph Stiglitz, MCC, Millennium Challenge Account, Millennium Challenge Cooperation, OECD, Official Development Assistance, Organisaiton for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris Declaration, Posts, principal-agent theory, Tony Cunningham, World Bank
Tagged Adam Morton, aid effectiveness, aid ministry, AidData, Alan Duncan, America, American Capitalism, Andrea Riccardi, anti-competitive practices, Arthur Muhlen-Schulte, bail outs, bonuses, book, Busan, capitalism, Critical Political Economy, David Hudson, debt, Department for International Development, deregulation, Devex, DFID, Doha Development Round, Donna Lee, European Capitalism, European Union, Eurozone debt crisis, foreign aid, Fourth High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness, free-market, Global Governance, Ha-Joon Chang, Hansard, Huw Macartney, Ian Bruff, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Italy, Jill Steans, Joseph Stiglitz, laissez-faire, Manchester, Mark Lazarowicz, markets, Matthew Watson, MCA, MCC, Michael J. Tierney, Millennium Challenge Account, Millennium Challenge Cooperation, neoliberal, neoliberalism, Occupy London Stock Exchange, Occupy Wall Street, ODA, Official Development Assistance, OLX, OWS, Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, Preventing Suffering and Building Resilience, principal-agent theory, regulation, rent-seeking, Republicans, Rick Perry, Saving Lives, scorecard, Silke Weinlich, Stuart Shields, theyworkforyou.com, Tony Cunningham, umanitarian Leadership Development Programme, UN, United Nations, United States, US 2012 Election, Written Questions
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Revisiting Bill Easterly’s critique of Ha-Joon Chang’s Bad Samaritans
Back in Cambridge, I naturally had to read the works from my renown lecturer, Dr. Ha-Joon Chang. One of them was his book Bad Samaritans: The Guilty Secrets of Rich Nations & the threat to Global Prosperity (Random House Paperback version). … Continue reading
Posted in Economic Thought, Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, International Trade, Official Development Assistance, Posts, Poverty Reduction, World Bank
Tagged Aid Watchers, Albert Winsemius, Anne Osborn Krueger, Arnold Harberger, Bad Samaritans, China, copyright violations, democracy, democratic, deregulation, Douglas Irwin, East Asia, East Asian Miracle, economic development, economic growth, economics, FDI, Foreign Direct Investment, free trade, free-market, Ha-Joon Chang, heterodox economics, Hong Kong, Indonesia, infant industry protection, International Development, Japan, Ju-Yung Chung, Karl Polanyi, Keynesianism, Kicking Away the Ladder, laissez-faire, Leonard Mlodinow, Malaysia, neoliberalism, New York Review of Books, ODA, Official Development Assistance, Punam Chuhan-Pole, regulation, Singapore, South Korea, state intervention, Structural Adjustment, Structural Adjustment Policies, Taiwan, tariffs, The Drunkard's Walk, Washington Consensus, William Easterly, World Bank
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Africa after 50: An ODI-WB Event
Last week, I went down to London to attend an ODI and World Bank conference titled Africa after 50: building on recent development progress.
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Posted in DFID, Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Millennium Development Goals, Overseas Development Institute, Posts, Poverty Reduction, World Bank
Tagged Africa, Alison Evans, Department for International Development, DFID, Ha-Joon Chang, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Justin Lin, Laurie Lee, Liam Clegg, liberalisation, Liesbet Steer, macroeconomic stability, Mark Lowcock, neoliberalism, ODI, Overseas Development Institute, Patrick Gihana-Mulenga, Paul Kagame, Punam Chuhan-Pole, Rwanda, trade liberalisation, Trade Protectionism, Washington Consensus, Will Day, World Bank
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IPE-ID Clash 2: States and International Organisations
The second clash in the fields of International Political Economy and International Development regarding states and International Organisations Continue reading
Posted in Ha-Joon Chang, IMF, International Development, International Political Economy, IPE, Joseph Stiglitz, Posts, UNDP, World Bank
Tagged Catherine Weaver, Constructivism, Constructivist approach, Ha-Joon Chang, IMF, International Development, International Monetary Fund, International Organisations, International Political Economy, International Relations, IPE, Joseph Stiglitz, Liam Clegg, Morphogenic Cycle, PA theory, principal-agent theory, UNDP, United Nations Development Programme, World Bank
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A Question on the Criticism of Microfinance
A very short entry here on a very extensive subject in the field of development—Microfinance. Continue reading
