Extreme. Poverty dropped from 30 to 20 percent before the first results of the field trials were in and evaluated and published

Last week Paul Romer crashed out of his position as Chief Economist at the World Bank. He had already been isolated from the rest of the World Bank’s researchers for criticizing the reliability of their data. It seems there were several bones of contention, including the accusation that Chile’s current social democratic government falsified data contributing to some of its development indicators. Romer’s allergic reaction to the World Bank’s internal research processes has wider implications for how we think about policy research in international NGOs.
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Jan 29, 2018 @ 11:27:39
really interesting piece Jim
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