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Tag Archives: health

Time for toilet deregulation?

UPDATE 10:34AM, 4/16 SEE END OF POST

Right now, India has more cell phones than toilets. That’s the headline buzzing over the wires today, thanks to the latest phones-to-toilets ratio released by the United Nations. It’s certainly a dramatic factoid. But it’s not just true of India’s 1.2 billion-strong population — this lopsided statistic is true around the globe, as well.

This is from the Change.org Global Poverty blog. The most obvious explanation:

And

Posted in Big ideas/ the secret to development is..., Entrepreneurship, Technology | Also tagged , , , 17 Comments

The good news on maternal mortality: Uncertainty about everything except the advocates’ response

UPDATE 4/15, 4pm EDT: see end of post.

The NYT lead story today (as well as other media) reports a new study with some very good news:

For the first time in decades, researchers are reporting a significant drop worldwide in the number of women dying each year from pregnancy and childbirth, to about 342,900 in 2008 from 526,300 in 1980.

So happy about success! Alas, the universal rule with media reports of development…

Posted in Badvocacy and celebs, Data and statistics, Global health, In the news | Also tagged , 11 Comments

Does health aid to governments make governments spend more on health?

If you’re not an economist, you might reasonably assume that the answer to this question is yes. The story might go something like this: aid agencies give money to poor country governments to distribute bed nets or give vaccinations, and those additional funds are added to whatever money the country was able to scrape together to spend on health before the donor came along. As a result of the health aid, the total amount of…

Posted in Aid policies and approaches, Economics principles, Global health, International organizational behavior | Also tagged 26 Comments