Changing the Conditions for Development Aid

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Aid Allocation
aid effectiveness
aid effectiveness debate
Aid Inflows
aid policies
allocation strategies
Assessing Aid report
Category=GTP
CDF
Endogenous Regressors
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Fiscal Illusion
Full Fungibility
Gdp Growth
Gdp Ratio
Gdp Variable
GNP Ratio
Growth Regression
impact assessment in development aid
Initial Gdp
international development policy
macroeconomic management
Matching Grant
Negative Marginal Impact
Neo-classical Growth Model
Nominal Gdp
OLS Regression
Performance Ii
policy conditionality
policy environment
Pooled Cross-section Time Series Analysis
Productive Government Spending
Real Gdp
recipient country governance
Recurrent Revenue
Van Der Hoeven

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138867277
  • Weight: 290g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In 1998 the World Bank published a report entitled "Assessing Aid: What Works, What Doesn't and Why". This report presents the results of an extensive investigation into the effectiveness of development aid. The main message of the text of the report is that development aid helps, but only when there is a good policy environment in the recipient countries, that is when there is sound macroeconomic management and when robust government institutions exist. It stresses that it is a myth to think that good policies can be bought by giving development aid: giving aid conditional on policy reforms does not lead to improved economic policies. The conclusion of the World Bank report is that aid flows should be directed only to countries with sound policies and that it should be focused more on supporting governments in reforming entire sectors, rather than on specific development projects. The "Assessing Aid" report has led to heated debates, both among academics and policy-makers, about development aid and aid policies. Many have questioned the methodology used, the results and the policy conclusions of the report. This book aims to contribute to the ongoing discussion about the future of development aid. In particular, it re-examines a number of issues that are crucial to the analysis and to the conclusions of the World Bank report. In this study the authors aim to put the discussion on the future of development aid into perspective and summarise the main findings of the other studies in this collection. They focus on two issues: the aid effectiveness debate before and after the Assessing Aid report, and the discussion on policy conditionality and good governance. Section II provides a brief survey of past research on aid effectiveness, that is, before publication of the Assessing Aid report and summarises the main findings of the World Bank report on aid effectiveness. In this study the authors aim to put the discussion on the future of development aid into perspective and summarise the main findings of the other studies in this collection. They focus on two issues: the aid effectiveness debate before and after the Assessing Aid report, and the discussion on policy conditionality and good governance. Section II provides a brief survey of past research on aid effectiveness, that is, before publication of the Assessing Aid report and summarises the main findings of the World Bank report on aid effectiveness.

Robert Lensink, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.