📚 This is an archive of Aid Thoughts, a development economics blog that was active from 2009 to 2017. Posts and comments are preserved in their original form.

Lazy summer edition

Despite the fact that Ranil and I are often banging on about donor coordination, we both ended up taking a break from AidThoughts at the same time (oh no!). We'll both return soon - in the meantime I'll leave you with some random thoughts:

On Alanna Shaikh's twitter feed she writes:

Duncan Green and @owenbarder disagree on Tobin tax. Time for a development rumble? http://www.oxfamblogs.org/f...
I'm surprised and a bit disappointed that there hasn't been many  "development rumbles" in the blogosphere aside from the Easterly v Sachs v Moyo slugfest a few months ago in the Huffington Post (actually, how many development rumbles have there been that didn't involve Aid Watch?). It might be that we're all too polite or busy (or perhaps some of us are lowly grad students who aren't ready to be suplexed by a development heavy).

Perhaps we should have a debate-styled variant of Development Drums called Development Deathmatch?

Speaking of Aid Watch, has anyone else noticed Bill Easterly's recent tendency to link development concepts to good-looking female celebrities?

Also, see Chris Blattman's hilarious "The Joy of UN Sex"

Categories: Uncategorized

3 Comments

Ranil Dissanayake · September 06, 2009 at 11:28 AM

yes, bad timing! I'll post something shortly!

Owen Barder · September 06, 2009 at 01:10 PM

I'd be happy to host a rumbustious debate on Development Drums.

I'm planning an edition on corruption which will bring together Mushtaq Khan and Daniel Kaufmann, who come from quite different perspectives, which I hope will be interesting.

But I'd welcome suggestions for other interesting topics and guests on Development Drums.

Oh, and keep up the good work.

Owen

Ranil Dissanayake · September 07, 2009 at 07:03 PM

please do get that corruption edition! and advertise widely. The more people that are exposed to Mushtaq Khan's ideas the better. (transparency notice: he taught me during my master's degree).