The Business of Giving
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Former Gates Foundation exec Raj Shah to head USAID
Posted by Kristi Heim
The Obama administration has found yet another job for Rajiv Shah, the former Gates Foundation executive who has spent the past five months at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

DEAN RUTZ/SEATTLE TIMES
Shah, 36, has been nominated to head the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), according to reports quoting unnamed U.S. officials.
Shah was running the Gates Foundation's agriculture development program when he was tapped for the agricultural post as Under Secretary for Research, Education, and Economics, as well as chief scientist, at the USDA.
Shah holds degrees in medicine and economics. A health care policy adviser on Al Gore's presidential campaign, Shah joined the Gates Foundation in 2001 where he worked as policy analyst and senior economist and developed an innovative program for vaccine financing. He served as director of strategic opportunities and deputy director of policy and finance for the global health program. While in Seattle, Shah served on the boards of the Seattle Public Library and the Seattle Community College District.
Meanwhile the top job at America's foreign assistance program has gone vacant for nine months at a time when the program and the Foreign Assistance Act need serious revamping, development experts say. The USAID's international affairs budget request for 2009 was close to $40 billion.
The Gates Foundation has shown its growing clout in the capital with Bill Gates among Obama's first visitors to the White House, influencing education policy, and Bill and Melinda Gates recently appearing before policy makers in Washington D.C., calling on them to maintain the U.S. commitment to foreign aid and global health funding.
Why Shah? It helps that he has already gone through the official vetting process, which has put off other candidates.
Senators John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Dick Lugar, the committee's top Republican, last month urged Obama to speed things up, saying that efforts to support the president's development agenda were being "hampered by a leadership vacuum" at USAID.
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