Does US development policy have a future under Trump?

Published: Dec. 7, 2017, 5:48 p.m.

b"CID Student Ambassador Emily Ausubel interviews Todd Moss, Senior Fellow at the Center for Global Development and Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs. Todd talks about the future of US Development Policy under the Trump administration, about the government\\u2019s new priorities and how they can impact global development programs.\\nInterview recorded on December 1st, 2017\\n\\nVisit www.cid.harvard.edu for more information about CID's research and events.\\n\\nAbout Todd Moss:\\nTodd Moss is a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development where his research focuses on US-Africa relations, energy policy, and private investment. Moss is also a nonresident scholar at the Center for Energy Studies at Rice University\\u2019s Baker Institute and an adjunct professor at Georgetown.\\n\\nHe served as COO/VP at the Center from 2009-2016. Moss is currently working on electrification in Africa, cash transfers in new oil economies, and ideas for upgrading US development finance tools. In the past he led CGD\\u2019s work on Nigerian debt, reconstruction in Zimbabwe, the future of the World Bank\\u2019s soft loan IDA, and the African Development Bank. Moss served as Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Bureau of African Affairs at the U.S. Department of State 2007-2008 while on leave from CGD.\\n\\nPreviously, he has been a Lecturer at the London School of Economics (LSE) and worked at the World Bank, the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and the Overseas Development Council. Moss is the author of numerous articles and books, including African Development: Making Sense of the Issues and Actors (2011) and Oil to Cash: Fighting the Resource Curse with Cash Transfers (2015).\\n\\nMoss also writes an international thriller series for Penguin\\u2019s Putnam Books about a State Department crisis manager including The Golden Hour (2014), Minute Zero (2015), Ghosts of Havana (2016), and The Shadow List (forthcoming 2017)."