Adam Wagstaff
Adam Wagstaff is Research Manager of the Human Development and Public Services team in the Development Research Group. He holds a DPhil in economics from the University of York, and before joining the Bank was a Professor of Economics at the University of Sussex. He was an associate editor of the Journal of Health Economics for 20 years, and has published extensively on a variety of aspects of the field, including: health financing and health systems reform; health, equity and poverty; the valuation of health; the demand for and production of health; efficiency measurement, and illicit drugs and drug enforcement. Much of his recent work has been on health insurance, health financing, vulnerability and health shocks, and provider payment reform. He has extensive experience of China and Vietnam, but has worked on countries in Africa, Latin America, S Asia, and Europe and Central Asia, as well as other countries in E Asia. Outside health economics, he has published on efficiency measurement in the public sector, the measurement of trade union power, the redistributive effect and sources of progressivity of the personal income tax, and the redistributive effect of economic growth.
Follw Adam on twitter at @adamw2011.- 06/12/13 Were Gordon Brown and I right? Were poor children actually left behind by the Millennium Development Goals for education?
- 05/07/13 Cost-effectiveness vs. universal health coverage. Is the future random?
- 04/17/13 Reconciling the two “sciences of delivery”
- 04/08/13 So what exactly is the “science of delivery”?
- 03/26/13 Should inequality be reflected in the new international development goals?
- 03/20/13 Using an iPad to increase your productivity: a roundup
- 03/11/13 Universal Health Coverage and the post-2015 development goal agenda. And Mrs Gauri
- 02/27/13 A Sketch of a Ministerial Meeting on Universal Health Coverage
- 02/19/13 Cobertura universal de salud: ¿Un producto viejo en un nuevo envase? Si así fuera, ¿es eso tan malo?
- 02/19/13 Couverture de santé universelle : faire du neuf avec du vieux, est-ce forcément une mauvaise option ?
- 02/12/13 Universal health coverage: Old wine in a new bottle? If so, is that so bad?
- 01/14/13 Human Development and Inequality of Opportunity: a rejoinder to Ferreira
- 01/03/13 Some thoughts on human development, equal opportunity, and universal coverage
- 12/18/12 A guide to the top World Bank blogs and blog posts of 2012
- 12/10/12 Where in the world is a hospitalization least affordable?
- 12/03/12 Shocking facts about primary health care in India, and their implications
- 11/06/12 When the snow fell on health systems research: a symposium sketch
- 10/18/12 How can health systems “systematic reviews” actually become systematic?
- 10/04/12 Who’s writing what in the ‘Knowledge Bank’? And is it being used?
- 09/27/12 Should you trust a medical journal?
- 09/25/12 Tracking withdrawals from the ‘Knowledge Bank’
- 09/20/12 So what exactly is a “knowledge bank”?
- 09/18/12 Measuring universal health coverage – plus ça change?
- 05/09/12 Yet more on coping with information overload with an iPad
- 04/10/12 A vast treasure trove of development knowledge just opened up
- am, nice blog which
- The Palma ratio
- Thanks, Por.
- Thanks, Joy. Yes, the idea is
- Thanks so much, Nir.
- Thanks for the comment. I
- Science of delivery
- On the sciency of delivery vs delivery of science
- On the "how to" science
- Inequality goal: All students decoding by the middle of grade 1
- Equity should be part of the equation
- Cecile, Many thanks for
- Bob, thanks for taking the
- An inequality goal is needed for education too
- Adam, You have made a case
