World Bank Podcasts

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Synopsis

Fighting poverty with passion and professionalism for lasting results. http://www.worldbank.org/The World Bank is one of the world's largest sources of development assistance. Our mission is to fight poverty with passion and professionalism for lasting results.We are not a bank in the common sense; we aim to help people help themselves and their environment by sharing knowledge and providing financial and technical assistance. Conceived in 1944 to reconstruct war-torn Europe, we work in more than 100 developing countries.

Episodes

  • News Highlights: World Is Friendlier Place for Businesses

    29/10/2014 Duration: 02min

    A new World Bank Group report has found that it’s easier to conduct business this year because 80 percent of world economies surveyed have improved laws and regulations. The most extensive reforms occurred in sub-Saharan Africa. Watch what countries can do to improve trade and commerce, which are key to ending poverty.

  • Spotlight: Free Nappies and Motorbikes Deliver Healthy Babies in Zambia

    17/10/2014 Duration: 05min

    An innovative program that allows health clinics to spend funds on what they need most has resulted in healthy babies and moms in Zambia. The World Bank's Health Results Innovation Trust Fund is supported by the governments of Norway and the United Kingdom. HRITF has been supporting Results-Based Financing (RBF) approaches since 2007 to help developing countries accelerate progress towards development goals, particularly those that focus on maternal and child health and nutrition.

  • News Highlights: Leaders Push to Speed Response to Ebola Crisis

    14/10/2014 Duration: 01min

    http://www.worldbank.org/ - Leaders of the World Bank Group, United Nations and affected African countries agreed at a critical meeting in Washington to work on speeding up the global response to the Ebola crisis. Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said they will reach out to countries around the world to send more health workers to Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

  • News Highlights: World Bank Announces Global Infrastructure Agreement and Aid to Haiti

    11/10/2014 Duration: 02min

    http://www.worldbank.org/ - During the 2014 Annual Meetings, the World Bank has launched a massive private sector partnership to raise billions of dollars in private money to build infrastructure in developing economies and also announced a 50 million dollar pledge to fight cholera in Haiti. Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said waterborne diseases are a leading cause of death for Haitian children. He also said that all developing countries need an estimated 1 trillion dollars a year to maintain and increase infrastructure needed to keep their economies growing.

  • News Highlights: Ebola Could Cost $32.6 Billion

    08/10/2014 Duration: 02min

    http://www.worldbank.org/ - With the latest death toll from Ebola now at more than 3,400 in the three worst-affected countries of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, a new economic impact study from the World Bank Group says that if the epidemic was to significantly spread in neighboring countries, the two-year regional financial impact could reach US$32.6 billion by the end of 2015.

  • Africa's Pulse Fall 2014

    08/10/2014 Duration: 02min

    The World Bank’s biannual report on Africa’s economic performance, Africa’s Pulse, released in Washington, D.C. this week, finds that despite weaker than expected global growth and stable or declining commodity prices, African economies continue to expand. The report finds that Africa’s Growth may surpass five per cent in financial year 2015-16, but Ebola, terrorism and other risks also threaten these economies. World Bank Chief Economist for the Africa Region, Chico Ferreira: “The good news in the Africa’s Pulse that’s coming out this fall, is that growth continues to be strong in Sub-Saharan Africa. Growth in 2014 is expected to come in in 4.6 percent. Of course there are downside risks that we need to be aware of. The most important one, that’s on everyone’s mind, is the risk of Ebola and contagion from Ebola in West Africa. For the rest of the continent, Africa’s Pulse finds that significant public investment in infrastructure, increased agricultural production and expanding services in African retail,

  • News Highlights: Turning on the Taps to Help Lebanon’s Poor and Syria’s Refugees

    30/09/2014 Duration: 08min

    It seems impossible but true. Lebanon has one of the world’s largest amounts of available fresh water and yet its people have such limited access that the taps for many are turned on for only a few hours a day. Now, the World Bank Group has announced a massive project that will soon get water flowing to over 1.6 million people in and around Beirut, improving the lives of Lebanon’s poorest, including Syrian refugees seeking shelter from conflict back home.

  • Ebola: The Economic Impact of Ebola in Liberia

    19/09/2014 Duration: 08min

    Producer Eva Flomo of United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) Radio discusses the economic impact of Ebola on Liberia's economy with Timothy Bulman, World Bank Senior Country Economist in Liberia. A recent World Bank Group analysis of the Ebola epidemic has found that that if the virus continues to surge in the three worst-affected countries – Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone – its economic impact could grow eight-fold, dealing a potentially catastrophic blow to the already fragile states.

  • Ebola: Economic Impact Already Serious; Could Be “Catastrophic”

    18/09/2014 Duration: 02min

    http://www.worldbank.org/ - A World Bank Group analysis of the Ebola epidemic released today finds that, beyond the terrible toll in human suffering, the continuing surge in the deadly virus in the three worst-affected countries – Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone – could deal a potentially catastrophic economic blow to the already fragile states. World Bank President Jim Yong Kim says that the largest economic effects of the crisis are not as a result of the direct costs (mortality, morbidity, caregiving, and the associated losses to working days) but rather those resulting from aversion behavior driven by fear of contagion. The analysis finds that economic costs can be limited if swift national and international responses succeed in containing the epidemic.

  • Carbon Taxes and Investment in Public Transport

    16/09/2014 Duration: 06min

    Economists often recommend fuel taxes to curb greenhouse gas emissions from automobiles in cities. But the effectiveness of these taxes depends heavily on other factors, like the availability of public transportation, and the density of a city. A recent paper by Stephane Hallegatte, Senior Economist in the World Bank's Climate Change Unit, and his colleagues finds that taxes are twice as effective when accompanied by an investment in public transport. In this interview, Hallegate discusses his paper and findings. For more information, visit: http://www.worldbank.org/en/research

  • News Highlights: Farming for a Cool World

    09/09/2014 Duration: 01min

    http://www.worldbank.org/ - Listen to how Kenyan farmers produce more food, improve lives, and help mitigate climate change. The Carbon Credit program helps them better manage their land as rainfall becomes more erratic.

  • News Highlights: Road to Riches in Bangladesh

    28/08/2014 Duration: 01min

    http://www.worldbank.org/ - Bangladesh has a labor force ready to produce goods for the world market. But bad roads and ports slow down exports and drive up costs. Now, a plan to improve the transport system could pave the way to more jobs and prosperity.

  • Ebola: Tackling The Outbreak in West Africa

    27/08/2014 Duration: 05min

    The World Bank is working with the World Health Organization, the United Nations and other development partners to support the governments of Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, as they work to contain the spread of the Ebola Virus.

  • Improving health outcomes for women and survivors of sexual based violence in Africa's Great Lakes

    27/08/2014 Duration: 05min

    A new World Bank supported project, the first of its kind in Africa, will provide integrated services to survivors of sexual and gender based violence in the DRC, Rwanda and Burundi. Survivors will receive health services, mental health counseling, legal aid, and economic opportunities. In Burundi and the DRC, they will also receive much-needed maternal and reproductive health services.

  • 2014 Africa Region Financial Year End Review

    27/08/2014 Duration: 02min

    The world bank group committed a record breaking US$15 Billion to Sub-Saharan Africa's development during the 2013 and 2014 fiscal year. The Bank supported job training programs for youth, the prevention of malaria and other tropical diseases as social protection for poor families across the region.

  • Preparing Young Women for Entrepreneurship and Jobs (UGANDA)

    27/08/2014 Duration: 07min

    In this second episode of a 2-part podcast on the economic empowerment of young women, broadcaster Georges Collinet discusses the importance of employment training and the reproductive empowerment of young women in Uganda with an expert from the world’s largest NGO, BRAC, and two World Bank gender specialists.

  • Preparing Young Women for Entrepreneurship and Jobs (LIBERIA)

    27/08/2014 Duration: 06min

    In this first episode of a 2-part podcast on the economic empowerment of young women, broadcaster Georges Collinet discusses entrepreneurship, technical training and soft skills training for young women in Liberia, with the Liberian Deputy Gender Minister, and two World Bank gender specialists.

  • CPIA Africa

    26/08/2014 Duration: 02min

    The latest World Bank review of government policies and institutions in Africa shows that 20 percent of countries improved their policy environment to boost growth and cut poverty in 2013.

  • Africa's Pulse Spring 2014

    26/08/2014 Duration: 03min

    Economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) continues to rise from 4.7 percent in 2013 to a forecasted 5.2 percent in 2014. This performance is boosted by rising investment in natural resources and infrastructure, and strong household spending, according to the World Bank’s new Africa’s Pulse, a twice-yearly analysis of the issues shaping Africa’s economic prospects.

  • Tanzania Conditional Cash Transfers

    26/08/2014 Duration: 11min

    Legendary broadcaster Georges Collinet sits down with one of the researchers from the Conditional Cash Transfer project in Tanzania and the head of the Tanzania Social Action Fund to discuss the program, the study, and the results in this ten-minute podcast.

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