Paul Collier

From Powerbase
Revision as of 11:31, 4 August 2010 by Miriam Rose (talk | contribs) (New page: Paul Collier is a prolific academic and writer on development, conflict and aid on the world's poorest nations. In particular he has promoted the potential benefits of extractive industrie...)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Paul Collier is a prolific academic and writer on development, conflict and aid on the world's poorest nations. In particular he has promoted the potential benefits of extractive industries for low income nations, and how to avoid the 'resource curse'. He is also a sceptic of organic farming and is pro genetically modified foods.

He is currently a professor of Economics, Director for the Centre for the Study of African Economies at at Oxford University. He was previously Director of the Development Research Group of the World Bank from 1998-2003[1].

According to Oxford University in 2010:

He is also a Professeur invité at CERDI, Université d’Auverge, and at Paris 1. In 2008 Paul was awarded a CBE ‘for services to scholarship and development’...Paul is currently Advisor to the Strategy and Policy Department of the International Monetary Fund, advisor to the Africa Region of the World Bank; and he has advised the British Government on its recent White Paper on economic development policy. He has been writing a monthly column for the Independent, and also writes for the New York Times, the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post[2].

Privatisation and Resource extraction

His first book 'The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries are Failing and What Can Be Done About It' was acclaimed by Jeffry Sachs[3], the development economist famed for developing 'economic shock therapy'- a technique for economic growth involving mass privatisation and liberalisation[4]

His Second book “The Plundered Planet: Why We Must — and How We Can — Manage Nature for Global Prosperity” claims to be a pragmatic and practical look at how natural resources (particularly minerals for extractive industries) can be utilised to promote development and prosperity instead of corruption and 'plundering'. He pits two binary extremes against each other and presents his ideas as a third way between the 'Ostriches' who deny climate change, resource scarcity and social problems, and the 'Environmental Romantics', for example anti-genetically modified organisms campaigns, and 'back to the land' proponentsCite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag.


Resources

Notes

  1. World Bank, Winter 2002, Presenters Paul Collier Accessed 04/08/10
  2. CSAE website, About, Members Professor Paul Collier Accessed 04/08/10
  3. Writer Interviews website Paul Collier, interviewed by J. Tyler Dickovick, an Assistant Professor of Politics at Washington and Lee University Thursday, August 30, 2007. Accessed 04/08/10
  4. Sachs, Jeffry (2005) The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Our Time. The Penguin Press