CGD conducts research within a range of topics that impact
global poverty and people of the developing world. Topics include
aid effectiveness, education,
globalization and
global health, as well as the impact of trade and
migration on development. The center is well known for its research on
aid effectiveness. CGD president
Nancy Birdsall developed in 2010 a
Cash on Delivery (COD) Aid initiative, aiming to improve aid effectiveness by focusing foreign aid on outcomes, not inputs. In 2008, CGD produced a compilation of essays edited by Nancy Birdsall called "The White House and the World: A Global Development Agenda for the Next U.S. President". These essays give policy recommendations to solve international problems, such as global health, foreign aid policy, migration, global warming and foreign direct investment. CGD recently published a report on the dangers of drug resistance in "The Race against Drug Resistance: When Medicines Fail", which the Global Health team launched on June 14, 2010. The center's Migration and Development Initiative aims to study the effects labor movement has not only on the receiving country, but also on the country of origin and the migrants themselves. CGD economists
Michael Clemens and
Lant Pritchett have advocated for a development agenda that incorporates migration from low and middle-income to high-income countries, where wages for the same task can be up to ten times higher. However, they argue that the misperception that development is about places rather than people often leads policymakers as well as economists to ignore the large benefits to the migrants themselves. Rich countries' immigration policies are also a factor in the
Commitment to Development Index. CGD has advocated for temporary visas for Haitians to seasonally work in US agriculture and participated in an initiative to that end. In 2016, they issued a report on how policymakers can manage migration between the United States and Mexico to the benefit of both countries. CGD Senior Fellow Ranil Dissanayake publishes a weekly blog associated with the Center for the Study of African Economies. Other research topics listed on their website include
capital flows/
financial crises,
debt relief,
environmental issues, economic growth,
governance/democracy,
international financial institutions, finance, food and agriculture,
inequality, population, poverty, private investment, security and development, and data sets and resources. ==Funding==