Quality. Independence. Impact.

Home | Contact Us | Media Resources

Thursday November 20, 2008

Welcome   |   Register   |   Log in

Past Event

Brookings Global Young Professionals Program

6.7 Billion Secrets of Development with Bill Easterly

Development, Developing Countries, Global Poverty, Global Economics


Event Summary

The Global Economy and Development program at Brookings hosted the third meeting of its Global Young Professionals Program on June 5. The briefing brought together over 90 young professionals—the next generation of leaders working in the fields of global economics and development. The breakfast featured William Easterly, distinguished economist and development expert, who presented on 6.7 Billion Secrets of Development which brought to light the failure of many development “experts” to inspire economic growth and promoted social entrepreneurship and bottom-up development as a means to successful growth creation.

Event Information

When

Thursday, June 05, 2008
8:30 AM to 10:00 AM

Where

The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

William Easterly is a visiting fellow with Brookings Global, and professor of economics at New York University, joint with Africa House, and co-director of NYU's Development Research Institute. He is a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. He is also a non-resident fellow of the Center for Global Development.

William Easterly received his Ph.D. in economics at MIT. He spent 16 years as a research economist at the World Bank. He is the author of The White Man's Burden: How the West's Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good (Penguin, 2006); The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics (MIT, 2001); four other co-edited books; and 59 articles in refereed economics journals. His work has been discussed in numerous media outlets worldwide. Foreign Policy magazine named him one of the world's Top 100 Public Intellectuals in 2008.

Easterly's areas of expertise are the determinants of long-run economic growth; the political economy of development; and the effectiveness of foreign aid. He has worked in most areas of the developing world, most heavily in Africa, Latin America and Russia. Easterly is an associate editor of the Quarterly Journal of Economics, the Journal of Economic Growth, and of the Journal of Development Economics.

Transcript

WILLIAM EASTERLY: I think the radical revolution and development that has happened over the past fifty years is that … individuals are not just anonymous masses that are going to be commanded by the top-down development experts, they’re individuals that are rational, that are seeking to better their own lives, and they know much more about their own problems than the top-down experts do. And when you have a system of individual choice, then anyone who … is dealing with a public or private problem has a strong incentive to solve that problem. Because not only do they solve their own problem, but in a system with individual choice -- when you solve a problem, then you might be able to politically or economically sell it to everyone else who will freely choose your solution to the problem. That’s the beauty of individual choice is that you have a test of what works; you have a feedback of what works from individual choice. That anytime anyone does find a solution, then that solution will be verified by everyone choosing to accept their solution.

Participants

Introduction and Moderator

Raji Jagadeesan

Global Economy and Development

Featured Speaker

William Easterly

Nonresident Senior Fellow, Global Economy and Development


My Portfolio

My New Content

View suggested content based on items you have saved to your Portfolio.
Log in or register now