Alexander Preker, MD, PhD

  • Adjunct Assistant Professor in Health Policy and Management
  • Adjunct Lecturer
Profile Headshot

Overview

Professor Preker is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management at Columbia University, an Executive Scholar at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York and a Lecturer with the joint Ecole des Hautes Etudes commerciales de Paris (HEC) — Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar Leadership Program.

Professor Preker a globally recognized expert on financing, capital investment, private sector development, and market-based solutions to public policy challenges. He is President and CEO of the Health Investment & Financing Corporation and a member of the board of several companies and organizations, including the USA HealthCare Alliance (USAHA) that works closely with the US Department of Commerce and the Export-Import Bank of the USA (EXIM).

He was a Founding Member of the New York Chapter of the Keiretsu Forum, a Limited Liability Partner with Professor Preker is active as an early-stage investor and business development advisor the Keiretsu Capital Fund, an active investor with OurCrowd and other investment vehicles that focus on early-stage companies that have a high potential for impact including in the environmental sector. He is a Member of the Board of the International Collaboration and Exchange Program, an international medical student exchange program. He was one of the Commissioners on the Commission on Pollution, Health, and Development.

Prior to his current work, Professor Preker had a distinguished career, working at different times for the World Bank Group (WBG), including the International Bank of Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), the International Development Association (IDA), and the International Finance Corporation (IFC). And at various times he was on external assignment with the World Health Organization (WHO) and International Labour Organization (ILO). From 2007 to 2012, Professor Preker was Head of the Health Industry Group and Investment Policy for the Investment Climate Department of the World Bank/IFC. The Department was a leader in investing in the new solutions to the threats of climate change, infrastructure, public-private-partnerships, health and education, e-Government solutions, and competition. He and his team set up a US$1 billion Investment Facility to improve the market environment for private sector participation and expand small and medium-sized businesses in the Africa Region, and did the preparatory work to set up a similar facility for Asia.

Earlier in his World Bank career, as Chief Economist for the health sector, Professor Preker was responsible for oversight over an annual lending pipeline of about US$3 billion with a total portfolio value in the range of US$15 billion. During this period, he had the privilege of working with both Lawrence Summers (former Director of the National Economic Council in the Obama Administration) and Joseph Stiglitz (recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences) during their respective tenures as Chief Economist for the World Bank Group (WBG), as well as many ministers, other senior officials, and private businesses and investors. It was in the 1990s, during Mr. Summers’s tenure at the Bank, that the organization largely abandoned industrial policy in favor of more market-based approaches to industrial development. Notably, during the 1990s, Professor Preker was involved in the transformation of the moribund planned economies and the failed socialist industrial policy of Central and Eastern European countries to more dynamic market-based economies following the collapse of the former Soviet Union. He and others from his team were also involved in providing technical inputs into and compliance monitoring of several of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) as well as the later Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Professor Preker has published extensively, having written many scientific articles, and authored over 20 books. He is the Editor-in-Chief for the World Scientific Series on Health Investment and Financing. Previously, Professor Preker was the Chair of the Editorial Board for the World Hospitals and Health Services journal of the International Hospital Federation (IHF) and is now an Honorary Member of the Governing Council of the Federation. During his tenure at the World Bank, he was a member of the Editorial Board for the World Bank’s External Operations Publication Department and Editor-in-Chief of the Bank’s Health, Nutrition, and Population Series.

Professor Preker holds several academic appointments. He is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management at Columbia University, an Executive Scholar at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York and a Lecturer with the joint Ecole des Hautes Etudes commerciales de Paris (HEC) — Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar Leadership Program. His education includes a PhD in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science, an MD from the University of British Columbia/McGill, and a Diploma in Medical Law and Ethics from Kings College, London.


Academic Appointments

  • Adjunct Assistant Professor in Health Policy and Management
  • Adjunct Lecturer

Credentials & Experience

Education & Training

  • MD, 1978 University of British Columbia/McGill
  • Other, 1984 University College London
  • Other, 1986 Kings College London
  • PhD, 1990 London School of Economics

Editorial Boards

Editor in Chief, Health Investment & Financing Series, World Scientific Press

Chair of Editorial Committee, World Hospitals and Health Services Journal

Honors & Awards

Executive Scholar

Research

Global Health Activities

World Bank, http://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/health: Prior to his current work, Mr. Preker had a distinguished career, working at different times for International Bank of Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), International Development Association (IDA), International Finance Corporation (IFC) and World Health Organization (WHO). Previously, as Chief Economist for the health sector, he coordinated the technical team that prepared the World Bank's Health, Nutrition and Population Sector Strategy in 1997. During the past 15 years, this strategy has provided a vision for the World Bank's engagement in the health sector in low- and middle-income countries, leading to an annual lending pipeline of about US$3 billion and total portfolio value in the range of US$15 billion. During his Bank career, Mr. Preker has worked with both Lawrence Summers (former Director of the National Economic Council under the Obama Administration) and Joseph Stiglitz (recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences) during their respective tenures as Chief Economist for the World Bank Group as well as many Ministers of Health, Finance, Economic Development and other senior officials as well as private investors and businesses in the client countries he served.

IFC, http://www.ifc.org/wps/wcm/connect/Industry_EXT_Content/IFC_External_Cor... From 2007 to 2012, Mr. Preker was Head of the Health Industry Group and Investment Policy for the International Finance Corporation (IFC). In this position, he led a team of advisors and analysts that worked with policy makers, investors and health businesses in improving the market environment for private sector participation in the health sector in developing countries. He and his team set up a US$1 billion Investment Facility for Health to support expansion of small and medium size businesses in the Africa Region and the preparatory work for setting up a similar facility for Asia.

Commission on Pollution, Health and Development, https://www.commissiononpollution.org: Commissioner The Commission on Pollution and Health is an initiative of The Lancet, the Global Alliance on Health and Pollution (GAHP), and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, with additional coordination and input from the United Nations Environment Programme and the World Bank. The Commission comprises many of the world's most influential leaders, researchers and practitioners in the fields of pollution management, environmental health and sustainable development. The aim of the Commission is to reduce air, soil and water pollution by communicating the extraordinary health and economic costs of pollution globally, providing actionable solutions to policy-makers and dispelling the myth of pollution's inevitability. The Commission Report will be published in The Lancet in October of 2017.