Copenhagen Consensus - Results


These are the results of the Copenhagen Consensus for 2008, as I promised.

1 Micronutrient supplements for children (vitamin A and zinc) Malnutrition

2 The Doha development agenda Trade

3 Micronutrient fortification (iron and salt iodization) Malnutrition

4 Expanded immunization coverage for children Diseases

5 Biofortification Malnutrition

6 Deworming and other nutrition programs at school Malnutrition & Education

7 Lowering the price of schooling Education

8 Increase and improve girls’ schooling Women

9 Community-based nutrition promotion Malnutrition

10 Provide support for women’s reproductive role Women

11 Heart attack acute management Diseases

12 Malaria prevention and treatment Diseases

13 Tuberculosis case finding and treatment Diseases

14 R&D in low-carbon energy technologies Global Warming

15 Bio-sand filters for household water treatment Water

16 Rural water supply Water

17 Conditional cash transfers Education

18 Peace-keeping in post-conflict situations Conflicts

19 HIV combination prevention Diseases

20 Total sanitation campaign Water

21 Improving surgical capacity at district hospital level Diseases

22 Microfinance Women

23 Improved stove intervention Air Pollution

24 Large, multipurpose dam in Africa Water

25 Inspection and maintenance of diesel vehicles Air Pollution

26 Low sulfur diesel for urban road vehicles Air Pollution

27 Diesel vehicle particulate control technology Air Pollution

28 Tobacco tax Diseases

29 R&D and mitigation Global Warming

30 Mitigation only Global Warming

There is lively discussion in The Times here and here

For myself, I think that I would like to have seen attention given to empowering people to change their own lives, rather than imposing on them what someone else thinks they should want.

The Copenhagen Consensus


Imagine that you are Bill Gates. Not to daydream about what to buy with a $58 billion fortune, but to consider how, like the Microsoft entrepreneur, you might give much of it away.

There are dozens of global challenges that could benefit from your philanthropy, but large as your financial resources are, they are not limitless. What would be your priorities? This week The Times is asking readers for their answers — while the Copenhagen Consensus project invites eminent economists to do the same.

An introduction to the Copenhagen Consensus 2008

Would your $50 billion be best spent on preventing the three great plagues of the modern era — malaria, tuberculosis and HIV, which claim tens of millions of lives each year?

Or might it be better to fund nutrition in developing countries, where almost 150 million children are underweight for their age and 200 million are chronically malnourished?

What about climate change, which many scientists consider to be the gravest threat of all? Should you invest in improving renewable energy technologies, to reduce reliance on fossil fuels?

Your choice would obviously be influenced by your social and political outlook, and by your perceptions of which challenges matter the most. But you might also want to be confident of getting a decent bang for your buck.

Is it possible to establish which of these challenges can be solved most cost-effectively, so that your generosity does the greatest good for the greatest number?

That is the question that a panel of eight economists, including five Nobel laureates, will attempt to answer next week, as the Copenhagen Consensus deliberates in the Danish capital.

Over the coming days, they will hear presentations from 30 specialists in particular global problems, each of whom will make the case for a menu of solutions in their fields.

Ten topics have been chosen for debate:
terrorism;
conflict;
malnutrition and hunger;
education;
the role of women;
air pollution;
subsidies and trade barriers;
disease;
sanitation and water;
and global warming.

The panel will decide on a league table, to guide investments by philanthropists, charities and governments.

The exercise is the brainchild of Bjørn Lomborg, the controversial Danish statistician whose 2001 book The Skeptical Environmentalist upset many scientists and green activists with a revisionist view of ecological issues.

The outcome of the first Copenhagen Consensus, held in 2004, proved equally contentious, not because of HIV’s place at the head of the list, but because of what was at the bottom.

Climate change is a reality, the panel argued, but the Kyoto Protocol was not a cost-effective way of addressing it. Limiting greenhouse-gas emissions would postpone the problem only slightly, and at unacceptable cost.

Some commentators considered this to be a thought-provoking injection of rationalism to an emotional debate. Others dismissed it as the consensus of a “random group” of economists lined up to endorse Dr Lomborg’s well-known scepticism about Kyoto.

Further criticism has been directed at the merit of considering these issues purely in terms of cost and benefit. Factors such as social justice, ecological stewardship and political acceptability are also important, but are exceptionally difficult to price.

Other development economists, such as Jeffrey Sachs, of Columbia University, think it misleading to present action on global warming, hunger and malaria as “either-or” options, when all these need to be addressed.

Dr Lomborg recognises these concerns, but argues that his initiative remains useful. “Clearly, there are other issues that matter as well as cost-benefit analysis,” he said. “But unless you put prices and values on things, it is difficult to make informed choices.

“What we’re doing is pricing up the menu. That doesn’t mean you have to pick the cheapest dish, or even the one that’s best value, but you want to know what they cost. Of course, it’s hard to compare carbon footprints with deaths from infectious diseases, but we often compare apples with oranges in everyday life. The challenge to these economists is to compare unlike with unlike as best they can.

“Too often, it’s the most photogenic and PR-friendly options that get priority. We want to step back and ask what’s actually most worthwhile.”

You can read more, and choose your own priorities here

I’ll let you know the results next week.

(from The Times, Saturday May 24 2008)

Randy Pausch - a truly inspiring man


I first saw this at the end of last year, but forgot about it.

So a big thank you to Alex Lewczuk at Southside Broadcasting for bringing it to my attention again.

Randy Pausch gave this talk to the students at Carnegie Mellon University after being told he was in the final stages of pancreatic cancer.

Here he takes his leave of his students, and talks of his thoughts about his life so far, and his life to come.

To say it is inspirational seems crass -but it truly is!

See it here