14.73 The Challenge of World Poverty (MIT)

MIT OpenCourseWare: New Courses 2013-03-28

Summary:

This is a course for those who are interested in the challenge posed by massive and persistent world poverty, and are hopeful that economists might have something useful to say about this challenge. The questions we will take up include: Is extreme poverty a thing of the past? What is economic life like when living under a dollar per day? Why do some countries grow fast and others fall further behind? Does growth help the poor? Are famines unavoidable? How can we end child labor—or should we? How do we make schools work for poor citizens? How do we deal with the disease burden? Is micro finance invaluable or overrated? Without property rights, is life destined to be "nasty, brutish and short"? Has globalization been good to the poor? Should we leave economic development to the market? Should we leave economic development to non-governmental organizations (NGOs)? Does foreign aid help or hinder? Where is the best place to intervene? Email this Article Add to Facebook Add to Twitter Add to digg Add to Google

Link:

http://www.pheedcontent.com/click.phdo?i=ad5bf66ac2f67914774ec6aee6592f17

From feeds:

#edutech » MIT OpenCourseWare: New Courses

Tags:

education entrepreneurship food health family economics world poverty risk insurance consumption credit savings political economy

Authors:

Duflo, Esther, Banerjee, Abhijit

Copyright info:

Content within individual OCW courses is (c) by the individual authors unless otherwise noted. MIT OpenCourseWare materials are licensed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike). For further information see http://ocw.mit.edu/terms/index.htm

Date tagged:

03/28/2013, 16:18

Date published:

02/10/2013, 22:12