From aid to Global Public Investment, an evolution in international co-operation blog

Gail Hurley and Jonathan Glennie argue that while most people thing aid should come to an end, the reality of our world demands a different, more far-sighted approach.

A proposal for a new universal development commitment paper

A paper by Andy Sumner, Myles Wickstead, Nilima Gulrajani and Jonathan Glennie setting out how much money could be raised if all countries contributed a % of their GNI to international goals.

Jonathan Glennie’s keynote lecture to Australasian Aid Conference video

A video presentation of the main concepts of GPI, about 50 min.

The WHO and the future of international public finance blog

Simon Reid-Henry and Jonathan Glennie argue that the current Covid-19 crisis has highlighted massive underfunding of global public health bodies. However, the pandemic also presents an opportunity to rectify this.

Symposium on GPI at QMUL Summary Note

A chair’s summary of the deliberations at two symposia hosted by Queen Mary, University of London.

Blog series on GPI hosted by Development Initiatives (with OECD Devt Center and UNU-IIGH)

A series of blogs discussing GPI and the future of aid jointly hosted by three organisations. Authors include Gorik Ooms, Nilima Gulrajani, Harpinder Collacott, Gail Hurley, Libby Smith and Navid Hanif

The Case for Global Public Investment

A Briefing Presentation on the concept and its implications. PPT Presentation.

Aid transformed, towards Global Public Investment

An article by Jonathan Glennie for UNA-UK’s annual SDG report arguing that Global Public Investment should become a mainstay of our collective efforts to build back better.

Global Public Investment, Redesigning international public finance for social cohesion

Simon Reid-Henry considers the case for a more structured system of international fiscal allocations: Global Public Investment.

Global Public Investment in the age of Covid-19

A short article by Simon Reid-Henry on how the Covid crisis has highlighted what is possible in the current global political context, but also what challenges remain to be addressed.