World Bank Progress in Harmonization and Alignment in Low-Income Countries
A series of global initiatives have been launched over the last decade by the international community to accelerate progress toward meeting the Millennium Development Goals. These initiatives entailed commitments to provide more aid and efforts to...
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Format: | Publications & Research |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC: World Bank Group
2015
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/01/15889911/world-bank-progress-harmonization-alignment-low-income-countries http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21347 |
Summary: | A series of global initiatives have been
launched over the last decade by the international community
to accelerate progress toward meeting the Millennium
Development Goals. These initiatives entailed commitments to
provide more aid and efforts to strengthen aid
effectiveness. They culminated in the Paris Declaration of
2005, which formalized five principles of aid effectiveness.
This evaluation addresses Bank efforts in advancing two of
the Paris Declaration principles harmonization and alignment
(H and A). These are the key tenets of donor coordination
falling primarily under the responsibility of donors
(including the Bank) and have been considered central to
strengthening aid effectiveness. This evaluation comes on
the run-up to the fourth high-level forum on aid
effectiveness, which will be held in Busan, Korea, at the
end of November. By focusing on the World Bank's
effectiveness in donor H and A and identifying steps to
improve the Bank's effectiveness, this work complements
the evaluation of the implementation of the Paris
declaration at the country level that was recently completed
under the auspices of the Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development. Finally, Independent
Evaluation Group (IEG) derives findings on the factors that
are important for promoting H and A. The evaluation does not
address the impact of H and A on development outcomes a
causal assumption of the Paris declaration because of the
great problems of attribution. |
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