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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)
Yurendra Basnett
Yurendra Basnett

Yurendra Basnett

Yurendra Basnett is a development economist specialising in trade and development policies. He has over seven years of experience advising governments, UN agencies and donors on Aid for Trade, WTO negotiations, regional trade agreements (such as Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations Plus, East African Community, Economic Partnership Agreement and South Asian Free Trade Agreement), trade capacity building, and trade and human development. He has worked in Uganda, South Sudan, Sudan, Namibia, Nepal, Vanuatu, Samoa and the Solomon Islands. He is also reading for his PhD in political economy of development at the University of Cambridge with Dr. Ha-Joon Chang. His thesis is on how institutions governing labour mobility function at regional, bilateral and global levels, and with what implications for economic development and poverty reduction.

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Unloading sacks of rice at Beira Port Run by Cornelder in Mozambique
Unloading sacks of rice at Beira Port Run by Cornelder in Mozambique

License: Creative Commons
Credit: IFDC Photography
Source: Flickr

Global Aid for Trade Review side event: Aid for Trade effectiveness – current issues and future directions

Event - Public event - 8 July 2013 16:30 - 18:00 (GMT+01 (BST))

This side event at the World Trade Organization's Fourth Global Review of Aid for Trade brought together a range of contributions to an ODI-COMSEC volume on Aid for Trade (Aft) and featured presentations and facilitated discussions on empirical evidence on the effectiveness of AfT; on AfT and global value chains; and on future directions on AfT.

Dirk Willem te Velde presented findings from ODI research exploring the effectiveness of AfT.

Leveraging the right kind of trade and investment

Opinion - Articles and blogs - 8 July 2013

Historical and contemporary experiences show that international trade can play a critical role in accelerating economic and social development. The track record of East Asian economies, in particular, emphasises its key contribution to achieving high and sustained economic growth. Many of these countries went from being poor developing countries to high-income countries within a generation.

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