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How to solve the world’s problems Setting Priorities with Copenhagen Consensus Herzliya, January 21, 2008.

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Presentation on theme: "How to solve the world’s problems Setting Priorities with Copenhagen Consensus Herzliya, January 21, 2008."— Presentation transcript:

1 How to solve the world’s problems Setting Priorities with Copenhagen Consensus Herzliya, January 21, 2008

2 Copenhagen Consensus - home page www.copenhagenconsensus.com

3 800 million are starving One billion lack clean drinking water Two billion lack sanitation Two million dying from AIDS each year 175 million international migrants 940 million illiterate adults Several billion people will be affected by global warming What would you do, if you could spend, say, $50 billion extra over the next 4 years to do good? There are lots of problems Framework

4 Priorities Not enough money Not enough time –Just one front page –Just limited number of top stories on CNN Not enough attention That’s why we need to prioritize –Also means we need to say what should not come first

5 Climate Change Communicable Diseases Conflicts Education Financial Instability Governance and Corruption Malnutrition and Hunger Population: Migration Sanitation and Water Subsidies and Trade Barriers The 10 challenges

6 Climate Change Communicable Diseases Conflicts Education Financial Instability Governance and Corruption Malnutrition and Hunger Population: Migration Sanitation and Water Subsidies and Trade Barriers Solutions to the 10 challenges Kyoto, $100 carbon tax Health clinics, mosquito nets UN peace-keeping forces Money for school books Bonds in local currencies Training for judges Provision of micro-nutrients Lowering barriers to migration Clean drinking water Free trade

7 10 world-class economists examine the 10 challenges 20 opponents - two per challenge The dream team 8 experts met in Copenhagen May 24-28 to prioritize across topics People

8 Copenhagen Consensus approach

9 Why economists? Because economists deal in prioritization of scarce resources Broad and general expertise Long, valuable experience Unaligned and impartial Objections

10 Optimistically realistic example $50 billion over four years correspond to 20% of yearly total development aid UN wanted spending to double since 1970 – it has fallen by half since 1965 Method remains no matter the actual amount of money Why ”only” $50 billion? Objections

11 Comparing apples and oranges This is what we do every day Decisions imply comparing apples and oranges We are prioritizing every day But too often the prioritization is implicit and unclear Objections

12 The Copenhagen Consensus list

13 Bad projects - four opportunities were rated bad 17 Climate Change Value-at-risk carbon tax 16 Climate Change Kyoto Protocol 15 Climate Change Optimal carbon tax 14 Migration Guest worker programs for unskilled workers

14 Good projects - five opportunities were rated good 9 Governance and corruption Lowering the cost of starting a new business 8 Sanitation, Water Research on water productivity in food production 7 Sanitation, Water Community-managed water supply and sanitation 6 Sanitation, Water Small-scale water technology for livelihoods 5 Malnutrition Developing new agricultural technologies

15 4 Diseases - Control of malaria Mosquito nets and effective medication could halve the incidence of malaria Costs: About $13 billion Benefits are at least five times the cost Very good projects - four opportunities were rated very good

16 3 Subsidies and Trade Barriers - Free trade Costs: Very low Benefits: Up to $2,400 billion a year Will benefit rich and poor countries alike Very good projects - three opportunities were rated very good:

17 2 Malnutrition - Providing micro-nutrients Resolves diseases caused by iron, zinc, iodine and vitamin A deficiency 2 billion people lack iron Costs: About $12 billion Very good projects - three opportunities were rated very good:

18 The best project 1 Diseases - Control of HIV/AIDS The scale and urgency of the problem are extreme, particularly in Africa 28 million cases would be prevented by 2010 The costs would be $27 billion, with benefits almost forty times as high

19 Is the list “correct”? Youth Forum –Malnutrition and disease Uganda Forum –Malnutrition and disease UN ambassador’s Forum –Disease, malnutrition, clean water

20 Strikingly similar to the experts list Malnutrition and diseases at the top – climate change at the bottom Consensus - result from Copenhagen Consensus Youth Forum

21 Involving the UN - Getting the top UN ambassadors to set priorities June 16-17 2006 –Meeting of top UN ambassadors, including China, India, USA Representing more than half the world’s population Surprisingly similar outcome with –Disease, water, education and hunger on top –Climate and financial stability at bottom

22 The path ahead - international Debate

23 The path ahead - research Cambridge University Press Global Crises - Global Solutions How to spend $50 billion We need better Information: Education, Conflicts, Financial Instability Implementation studies Arrow/North Copenhagen Consensus 2008

24 The path ahead - many areas of application This approach can be used everywhere as a rough-and-ready recipe for prioritization The world: Every 4 years In regions: Latin America or Middle East In countries: Azerbaijan, Zambia, Ghana, India In organizations: the UN, World Bank, USAID For single issues: the European Environment For Israel?

25 Involving the UN - Getting the top UN ambassadors to set priorities June 16-17 2006 –Meeting of top UN ambassadors, including China India USA Representing more than half the world’s population

26 Outcome Bottom (lowest third) –Financial Instability (30-36) International solution to the currency- mismatch problem (30) –Climate Change (27-40) Kyoto Protocol (27)

27 Outcome Middle –Conflicts (18-32) Post-conflict Aid to reduce risk of repeat conflict (18) –Corruption and Good Governance (17-29) Procurement Reform (17) –Migration (16-24) Migration for Development (16)

28 Outcome Top –Subsidies and trade barriers (9-32) Optimistic Doha Round (9)

29 Outcome Top –Malnutrition (4-13) Improving infant and child nutrition (4) Investment in technology in developing country agriculture (5) Micronutrients (8)

30 Outcome Top –Education (3-14) Physical expansion (3) Systemic reform (10)

31 Outcome Top –Sanitation and Water (2-21) Community-managed water supply and sanitation (2)

32 Outcome Top –Communicable Diseases (1-7) Scaled-up Basic Health Care Services (1) Control of HIV/AIDS (6) Control of Malaria (7)

33 Solve the world’s problems? - triage We don’t do it all Don’t do things –We don’t know how to do –Where we can’t do much good Rather do things where we can do –Much good –Now –At low cost


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