Center for Global Development: Difference between revisions

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'''The Center for Global Development''' is a nonprofit [[think tank]] and [[interest group]] "dedicated to reducing global [[poverty]] and inequality and to making [[globalization]] work for the poor." It influences "the policies of the United States, other rich countries, and such institutions as the [[World Bank]], the [[International Monetary Fund]], and the [[World Trade Organization]] to improve the economic and social development prospects in poor countries." CGD focuses on the interactions of globalization and heavily indebted developing countries, countries whose situations may be sufficiently desperate that they fail to qualify for some [[foreign assistance]] programs.<ref name=About>{{citation
'''The Center for Global Development''' is a nonprofit think tank and interest group "dedicated to reducing global [[poverty]] and inequality and to making [[globalization]] work for the poor." It influences "the policies of the United States, other rich countries, and such institutions as the [[World Bank]], the [[International Monetary Fund]], and the [[World Trade Organization]] to improve the economic and social development prospects in poor countries." CGD focuses on the interactions of globalization and heavily indebted developing countries, countries whose situations may be sufficiently desperate that they fail to qualify for some [[foreign assistance]] programs.<ref name=About>{{citation
  |url= http://www.cgdev.org/section/about/
  |url= http://www.cgdev.org/section/about/
  | title = About Us  
  | title = About Us  
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  | date = May 1, 2003 | url = http://www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/2920/?print=1&id=2920&datatype=5
  | date = May 1, 2003 | url = http://www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/2920/?print=1&id=2920&datatype=5
  | publisher = Center for Global Development}}</ref> Yet because the MCA
  | publisher = Center for Global Development}}</ref> Yet because the MCA
was focused on the “good performers,” [[weak state]]s and [[failed state]]s were understandably
was focused on the “good performers,” weak states and failed states were understandably
left out of the conversation—and in this case, their absence underscored
left out of the conversation—and in this case, their absence underscored
the dearth of strategic thinking on the challenges they posed. <ref name=OTB>{{citation
the dearth of strategic thinking on the challenges they posed. <ref name=OTB>{{citation

Latest revision as of 03:05, 21 March 2024

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The Center for Global Development is a nonprofit think tank and interest group "dedicated to reducing global poverty and inequality and to making globalization work for the poor." It influences "the policies of the United States, other rich countries, and such institutions as the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organization to improve the economic and social development prospects in poor countries." CGD focuses on the interactions of globalization and heavily indebted developing countries, countries whose situations may be sufficiently desperate that they fail to qualify for some foreign assistance programs.[1]

Foreign Policy ranked CGD among the world’s top think tanks (number 15 out of several thousand such research organizations). It was founded in 2001 by Edward Scott, Jr., C. Fred Bergsten and Nancy Birdsall.

Delivering on Debt Relief: From IMF Gold to a New Aid Architecture, by Birdsall and John Williamson, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, was the Center’s first book.

Millennium Challenge Act

The Millennium Challenge Act (MCA) became a center of CGD's operations.[2] Yet because the MCA was focused on the “good performers,” weak states and failed states were understandably left out of the conversation—and in this case, their absence underscored the dearth of strategic thinking on the challenges they posed. [3]

References

  1. About Us, Center for Global Development
  2. Steven Radelet (May 1, 2003), Challenging Foreign Aid: A Policymaker's Guide to the Millennium Challenge Account, Center for Global Development
  3. Stuart Eizenstat, Co-Chair; Congressman John Edward Porter, Co-Chair; Jeremy Weinstein, Project Director, ed. (8 June 2004), On the Brink: Weak States and US National Security, Commission on Weak States and US National Security