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Shaping policy for development

An overview of Lagoro IDP camp in Kitgum District, northern Uganda, 20 May 2007. Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Thu, 10/03/2013 - 09:36 -- Anonymous (not verified)
Dirk Willem te Velde
Dirk Willem te Velde

Dirk Willem te Velde

Dr Dirk Willem te Velde is the head of the International Economic Development Group. He led the European Report on Development 2012 on Confronting scarcity: managing water, energy and land for inclusive and sustainable growth launched in the run up to teh Rio+20 conference. He is currently undertaking work on the EU’s trade and investment policies and on policies and institutions to raise productivity in low income countries. He has written extensively on G20 issues, bringing developing country interests and research to the attention of the G20. Dirk Willem co-ordinated an influential study on the effects of the global financial crisis in 11 developing countries. He has advised donor agencies (e.g. DFID, Sida, and Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs), parliaments (e.g. UK, Cambodia) and multilateral bodies (World Bank, European Commission, UNCTAD, UNDESA, UNIDO, ILO, WTO LDC group) on the responses to the global financial crisis and other areas. He has written and edited several books, more than 25 journal articles and 25 book chapters related to investment, trade and growth issues. He holds a PhD from Birkbeck College, University of London.

Outputs

Policies towards foreign direct investment in developing countries: emerging best-practices and outstanding issues

Publication - Discussion papers - 1 March 2001

Governments in developing countries are increasingly looking for best-practice policies towards inward Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). FDI can bring positive effects (market access, technology, finance, skills), but also negative effects and hence a substantial quantity of FDI alone is not sufficient to generate economic growth and poverty reduction.

Financing International Public Goods

Projects - January 2001 to December 2001

This study documented how aid has been used to finance the provision of international public goods (IPGs) in developing countries and explored new approaches to their financing in the future. The study distinguished IPGs that relate to health, environment, knowledge, governance and security.

Boys use long poles to guide their Houseboat on the Meghna River
Boys use long poles to guide their Houseboat on the Meghna River

License: Creative Commons
Credit: Scott Wallace / World Bank
Source: Flickr

Exploring the impact, effectiveness and future of Aid for Trade

Projects
Aid for Trade (AfT) accounts for about a third of all overseas development assistance. ODI has been engaged in shaping its direction since before the launch in 2005 to help developing countries improve their trade capacity and address the impact of trade preference erosion.

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