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    economic development

    8 Books to Explain Development in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Monday, July 7th, 2008

    It is a common conversation piece among those trying to understand how the world works: how did it come to be that Sub-Saharan Africa is far less developed than the rest of the contemporary world? While there is no one simple answer, there is an answer. One that involves several intertwining threads with some causes […]

    True Progress is Looking for Writers

    Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

    True-Progress.com is looking for writers to contribute to the mission of finding enduring solutions. If you or someone you know would like the opportunity to regularly publish articles on this site, please see the details here.

    Development and Official Regulation

    Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

    If we consider development to be the general increase in well being of a population, then we have to recognize that there are times when the increase in one type of measure (real income) is countered by the negative action of another type of measure (disease rates). In these cases, government often steps in to […]

    Space Solar Power, The Next Leapfrog Technology ?

    Monday, June 2nd, 2008

    Recently, this article on CNN.com revisits the idea of collecting solar power in space and beaming it down to Earth. With such a large world demand for energy expected in the next 20 to 50 years, and declining costs for access to space, could this be the time for this science fiction technology to become […]

    Education in the Developing World

    Monday, May 12th, 2008

    Increasing the quality and quantity of education in poor countries is critical and absolutely necessary to their development, but let’s not lose sight of how disruptive a free and generous education can be. Education changes cultures, economies, and governments, and for nations entering that transition period the way must be prepared.

    Producing Enough Engineers in the United States

    Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

    What is the state of the American university system?  Does it produce the types of professionals needed to keep the American economy strong and innovative?
    We often hear a lot about how our contemporary economy requires plenty of professionals skilled in science and technology to maintain a healthy rate of innovation. There are are many reasons […]

    A Call to an Internet Arms Race

    Friday, May 2nd, 2008

    Progress via a True Global Internet
    In our contemporary world, one of the most important factors constraining the growth of societies is lack of information. In some places, infrastructure is not sufficiently developed in communications and electricity and the availability of electronics in the market to even allow people to connect to the information available via […]

    Review - Guns, Germs, and Steel

    Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

    Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond is an excellent explanation of why the world is the way it is. Combined with William Easterly’s book reviewed earlier on this site, a reader can finally get his or her hands around the broad historical causes that have produced the world that we live in.
    This is […]

    Development Off the Grid

    Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

    And, I mean way off…
    Picture yourself in a small tropical village a few hundred miles south of the Sahara Desert. About 800 people live there. You are probably related in one way or another to most of them, but you don’t really know how exactly, beyond your own close-knit extended family. There is no electricity, […]

    Review - The End of Poverty

    Sunday, April 13th, 2008

    The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Out Time by Jeffery Sachs, is an optimistic, forceful argument for the economic potential of developing countries and the necessity of increased in aid from rich countries to realize it.
    Jeffrey Sachs is an accomplished macro-economist, currently at Columbia University, who has experience helping poor countries get on track […]

    How Do We Define Progress?

    Thursday, April 10th, 2008

    Back in the good old days…
    Cultures seem to have their own ideas about what progress truly is and whether it exists at all or is just an illusion. Americans, in general, seem to have faith in progress over time, yet many continue to just as strongly express nostalgia for times past. Others have a more […]

    Review - Development As Freedom

    Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

    Development as Freedom, by Amartya Sen, winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics, provides a powerful argument that development and progress cannot be measured on the basis of economic output and consumption alone, that personal freedom is a very important and in some areas predominate variable in determining whether progress has been or will be […]

    The Challenge of Sustaining Sustainable Technology

    Monday, April 7th, 2008

    One small step forward…
    While I was serving as a teacher in the small town of Kankalabé (population: ~5000), Guinea in West Africa, the European Union financed a project to install a running water system in that town. The project, of limited benefit, was soon sabotaged and has since been nothing but a monument to unrealized […]

    Review - The Elusive Quest for Growth

    Saturday, April 5th, 2008

    The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists’ Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics by William Easterly is an honest answer to part of the question, “why hasn’t the world improved like we thought it would?” Easterly conducts a post-mortem conference on western aid programs since the end of World War II, finding that in many cases […]

    Appropriate Technology and Development

    Friday, April 4th, 2008

    Please, That’s Not Appropriate Here…
    Appropriate Technology, a somewhat condescending (from the receivers point of view) title for a movement that arose in the 1970s, focuses on providing an improved intermediate step on the technology staircase between developing and industrialized countries. While some of these ideas have been expressed for many decades (see The Ugly American […]