Aid transparency: are we nearly there?
There is good news and bad news in the 2016 Aid Transparency Index, which is published today.
There is good news and bad news in the 2016 Aid Transparency Index, which is published today.
Should the profits on scotch whisky be taxed in Scotland, where it is made, or China where it is sold? And what about Google?
Why cyclists cycle in the middle of the lane.
This isn’t the first time that Bill Gates and the UK government have announced a $3bn plan to eradicate malaria.
There is nothing inherently wrong with price discrimination. But some of the mechanisms firms use to enforce it have huge welfare costs.
One of my blog posts (written with Kim Elliott) ended up on Hillary Clinton’s desk according to the latest batch of released emails.
The Economist considers the implications of the UK’s new aid strategy.
By the end of today, the average Chief Executive of a FTSE 100 company will have been paid more than the average employee earns all year. The same average employee will have been paid more than the average Ethiopian earns all year.
It is time to change the British government rule which make the children of aid workers ineligible for student finance.
Britain’s new aid strategy has important implications, not only for DFID but for international organisations who will either need to adapt or face losing some of their core funding. Here’s why.