• News
    • Latest news
    • News search
    • Health
    • Finance
    • Food
    • Career news
    • Content series
    • Try Devex Pro
  • Jobs
    • Job search
    • Post a job
    • Employer search
    • CV Writing
    • Upcoming career events
    • Try Career Account
  • Funding
    • Funding search
    • Funding news
  • Talent
    • Candidate search
    • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Events
    • Upcoming and past events
    • Partner on an event
  • Post a job
  • About
      • About us
      • Membership
      • Newsletters
      • Advertising partnerships
      • Devex Talent Solutions
      • Contact us
Join DevexSign in
Join DevexSign in

News

  • Latest news
  • News search
  • Health
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Career news
  • Content series
  • Try Devex Pro

Jobs

  • Job search
  • Post a job
  • Employer search
  • CV Writing
  • Upcoming career events
  • Try Career Account

Funding

  • Funding search
  • Funding news

Talent

  • Candidate search
  • Devex Talent Solutions

Events

  • Upcoming and past events
  • Partner on an event
Post a job

About

  • About us
  • Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Advertising partnerships
  • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Contact us
  • My Devex
  • Update my profile % complete
  • Account & privacy settings
  • My saved jobs
  • Manage newsletters
  • Support
  • Sign out
Latest newsNews searchHealthFinanceFoodCareer newsContent seriesTry Devex Pro
    • News
    • 40-Under-40 Development Leader in DC

    Todd Moss’ formula for success: A blend of idealism and problem-solving savvy

    Todd Moss, vice president and senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, attributes his success in development to his ability to take his work, but not himself, seriously. This means holding onto idealism while staying the course through quick and efficient problem solving.

    By Julienne Gage // 27 January 2011
    Todd Moss, vice president and senior fellow at the Center for Global Development. Photo by: personal collection

    For most development workers, keeping it real is what helps to stay in the industry. For Todd Moss, it’s keeping it simple.

    In 2005, he got Nigeria an $18 billion debt relief with a “simple” two-page proposal.

    “I authored the analysis that the Nigerian finance ministry used to get reclassified as IDA-only inside the World Bank and then my simple two-page proposal for a first-ever discounted buyback at the Paris Club was used as a framework for the actual negotiations,” he explained in an e-mail to Devex.

    That kind of straightforward analysis is also helping college students better understand development concepts. In 2007, he published a textbook titled “African Development: Making Sense of the Issues and Actors.” A new edition of that book will be published in June.

    If Moss can make debt relief and university courses that easy, he most certainly has a few other fixes for development up his sleeve. Indeed, Moss has five research projects under way:

    - Proposals for using cash transfers as a way to fight the “oil curse” in poor countries, especially those where oil has only recently been discovered.

    - An analysis of how development contributes to counterterrorism programs in Africa’s Sahel region.

    - Projections of how IDA-21 might impact the work of the World Bank.

    - An examination of the best ways to use risk management tools in poor nations.

    - Zimbabwean engagement and reconstruction.

    Moss said his own success in development is due in part to his ability to take his work but not himself too seriously. That means holding onto idealism while staying the course of quick and efficient problem solving.

    “If we weren’t idealistic and didn’t want to make the world a better place, then we wouldn’t be working in this field,” Moss said. “But, at the same time, we have to be hard-headed in our analysis and practical with our ideas or we’re probably going to do more harm than good.”

    Read the announcement of Devex’s 40-under-40 honorees.

      Printing articles to share with others is a breach of our terms and conditions and copyright policy. Please use the sharing options on the left side of the article. Devex Pro members may share up to 10 articles per month using the Pro share tool ( ).

      About the author

      • Julienne Gage

        Julienne Gage

        As a freelance journalist and broadcast news producer based in Miami and Washington, Julienne contributes regularly to Devex. Her graduate studies in anthropology and journalism included research on youth development in Latin America and immigration in Spain.

      Search for articles

      Most Read

      • 1
        Revolutionizing lung cancer care and early screening in LMICs
      • 2
        Africa CDC chief: 60% of foreign health aid was effectively wasted
      • 3
        Devex Dish: The World Bank plants a $9 billion-a-year seed
      • 4
        Opinion: An industry playbook for addressing NCDs in LMICs
      • 5
        Inside the World Bank’s plan to boost jobs by investing in agribusiness
      • News
      • Jobs
      • Funding
      • Talent
      • Events

      Devex is the media platform for the global development community.

      A social enterprise, we connect and inform over 1.3 million development, health, humanitarian, and sustainability professionals through news, business intelligence, and funding & career opportunities so you can do more good for more people. We invite you to join us.

      • About us
      • Membership
      • Newsletters
      • Advertising partnerships
      • Devex Talent Solutions
      • Post a job
      • Careers at Devex
      • Contact us
      © Copyright 2000 - 2025 Devex|User Agreement|Privacy Statement