Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCody Rogers Modified over 10 years ago
1
Aid effectiveness and donor behaviour Karin Christiansen CAPE, ODI 13 th May 2004
2
Keeping it in perspective Aid and donors arent the cause of the problems that aid dependent countries face. But what if they arent part being part of the solution? …or even worse, preventing recipient countries from developing in a way that they can find their own solutions.
3
Strands in current debate 3 strands, linked but distinct: 1.Aid instruments and aid effectiveness (GBS vs projects); 2.Ownership and govt commitment (PRSP etc); 3.Donors behaviour and the impact on govt; –Consensus on good donorship principles –Identifying incentives and obstacles to change
4
Good donorship principles (see Briefing Paper p. 1) 1.Country leadership and ownership. 2.Capacity building for the long term. 3.Harmonisation and simplification. 4.Transparency and information sharing. 5.Predictability of resources and conditionality. 6.Subsidiarity of decision making.
5
Donors failure of govts? Effects of donor behaviour are cumulative. Key aspect is the decision set/incentive structure this presents government: a)Undermines prospects for domestic accountability; b)Undermines decision-making and policy formation.
6
Research agenda Impact of current donor practice: can we measure or assess the cumulative effects? Good donorship principles: are they the right ones; which are most relevant, and when? Operationalisation: what obstacles/ incentives can be identified? What can be done to force change, by a) donors and b) governments?
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.