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To infinity and beyond—three things international donors should consider as health economic evaluation goes global

Imagine you have a budget of £150m (US$193m) to spend in a country where the prevalence of malaria and teenage pregnancy is high, as are the corresponding infant, child and maternal mortality rates. You have three options to spend your money: a programme to distribute bed nets, protecting children against malaria; a programme that expands access to family planning, offering protection to young women; or a salary reform initiative, enabling the Ministry of Health to hire enough staff. You haven’t got enough money to do it all and you need "quick and attributable wins" that avoid negative media on the wastage of money. What would you choose?

EIU launches first phase of Changemakers research programme

Changemakers: Exploring new economies

The theory of disruptive innovation, developed by Harvard Business School‘s Clayton Christensen, describes how a new product or business model relentlessly captures market share, eventually displacing incumbents. Unnerving though it can be, disruption is not something to fear. Indeed, it has become a fact of life. Some companies are embracing change and making it core to their business.

Cancer control access and inequality in Latin America: A tale of light and shadow

SMEs and Global Growth: The High-Tech Advantage

To a greater extent every day, information technology is levelling the playing field for small and mid-sized enterprises (SMEs). Export markets, in particular, are no longer the exclusive domain of large players with the resources to field global sales and production staffs. Today, even startups can use the Internet to sell abroad, and to commission foreign firms to produce their designs cheaply.

Growth Crossings: The new rules of global trade

The rules of global trade are shifting and companies will need to make sure their supply chains have the agility and resourcefulness to deal with potential challenges and disruptions that may lie ahead.

Companies strongly embrace digital innovation to manage future supply chains, EIU study shows

The EIU's 2016 Democracy Index

With populism on the wane, what’s the upshot for the markets?

The markets have breathed an audible sigh of relief this spring.

A path to peace through inclusion

The peace accord agreed late last year between the government and the FARC paramilitary group gives Colombia a historic opportunity to improve the living standards of all its people. More than half a century of conflict cost an estimated 220,000 lives and led over 5m people to flee their homes, with severe consequences for the country’s prosperity, especially in the rural areas where violence was concentrated.

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