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TOP13 Crisis of Development Cooperation

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by Lea L.

According to Easterly/Williamson (2011), what criteria can be used to determine whether aid agencies are working effectively? Briefly define the five criteria! Do you think they are appropriate?

  • Classical aid in the form of ODA won’t be sufficent to achieve SDGs

  • Definition of ODA (offical developemnt aid) is not appropriate anymore as it is too narrow and doesn’t capture adequately the reality

    • many donors, large and small

    • new models for financung development are often based on neo-liberak thinking

    • China is providing an alternative model, mainyl channeling infrastructure and financial development aid

Conceptualising best practice by the following criterias

  1. Agency transparency: inclusive access to information about the operations of an agency e.g. China doesn’t publish any figures about its development activities

  2. Minimal overhead costs: Huge agencies often need/use a lot of the aid funds for their bureaucracy, monitoring and hiring and high billing experts e.g. UN agencies

    • e.g. through; ratio of administraive costs to ODA

    • BUT very low overheads is not necesserily better as their is a need of structure and high salaries in this sector

  3. Specialisation vs. fragmentation of aid: development policies often perform fragmented, agencies are splitting their budget among a large number of recipents and sectors

    • Problem: potential loss of effectiveness as there are countries and sectors that are “double” funded

  4. Delivery to more effective channels:

    • Problematic field e.g. tied aid (contractually agreed/forced to spent a certain amount on the donor countries goods or services e.g. China), Food aid: higher income countries export their excess and floods the domestic market which leads to increasing competition and decreasing prices, TA: funding forces to hire consultants from the donor country BETTER

  5. Aid is better, when allocations to less corrupt, more democratically free, poor countires (those in need)

    • USA: non-selectivity may reflect aid as foreign policy tool


What is meant by "beyond aid"? What are the dimensions of the concept? What do you think of the new emphasis on mobilising private capital with the help of ODA?

Normally

  • aid aims to improve living conditions in poor countries

  • DAC ODA definition leaves out that aid of donors also include other objectives such as intrinsic motivation to push own policy desires

    • asymmetrical balanc of power in aid relationships that is often manifested through the measure (e.g. TA with consultants from the donor country or tied aid)

Beyond aid

  • includes the decreasing role of aid relative to other contributions to development

  • Decreaing opportunity to shape policy through aid as the high number of aid actors decreases the weight of a specific partner

Four dimensions in which “beyond aid” differs from normal ODA

  1. Proliferation of aid actors: SSC, Private actors (NGOs, church-based, private charities)

  2. Proliferation of Finance sources and mechanisms: development finance targets the leveraging of private capital flow ( public-private partnership based on matching fun models)

  3. Regulation: International regimes increasingly define the framework of development (e.g. climate change); fostering trade especially access to markets and migration are more important than aid for achieving SDGs

  4. Knowledge: implicit knowledge of working in local contexts has become more relevant; knowledge generation, transmission, and use gain importance (development as a learning process)

Mobilising private capital

  • positve as the public sector doesn’t have the means to achieve the SDGs

  • Mobilising private capital also means supporting development of private entrepreneurship which is good for economic growth, decent labour, income generation

  • PPP de-risks investments as the governmantal funds acts as a guarentee and enables other eco-system donor to invest too (leveraging private capital)

  • Blended finans as a new measure of the huge development banks especially IFC, FMO and Proparco

BUT

  • financialisation goes hand in hand with marketisation and capitalism

  • fostering private sector also fostery property rights and trickle-down is often not working, increases unequal distribution

  • Countries can become dependent on foreign financing (e.g. Lewis-Modell dual economy; economic growth and capital accumulation can stop as soon as the foreign means are withdrawn)


Author

Lea L.

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