id okr-10986-27572
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-275722021-04-23T14:04:43Z Will Countries that Receive Insufficient Aid Please Stand Up? Utz, Robert AID AID AGENCIES AID ALLOCATION AID FLOWS BILATERAL AID BILATERAL DONORS BLIND COUNTRY ASSESSMENT COUNTRY PERFORMANCE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DEVELOPMENT BANKS DEVELOPMENT FINANCE DEVELOPMENT FINANCING DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES DEVELOPMENT POLICY DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH ECONOMIC GROWTH EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EQUALITY EXPORTS FOOD AID GAPS HUMAN RIGHTS INTERNATIONAL AID INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT LEARNING OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE PUBLIC POLICY WORTH The Accra Agenda for Action contains a commitment to increase aid effectiveness by 'addressing the issue of countries with insufficient aid.' This paper highlights the difficulties in identifying such countries unequivocally, given the limited theoretical and empirical knowledge on optimal aid allocations. Actual aid receipts by low income countries are compared to several benchmarks derived from different aid allocation models. These models differ primarily with regard to the weights assigned to country needs and performance. The analysis shows that different aid allocation models identify different sets of countries as receiving insufficient aid. The paper does not find a greater tendency for fragile states to receive insufficient aid compared to non-fragile states. However, there appears a greater tendency for bilateral aid to leave countries with insufficient aid compared to multi-lateral aid, which in fact in many cases partly compensates for under-funding from bilateral donors. The potential aggregate cost of increasing aid to countries with insufficient aid varies significantly depending on which aid allocation model is used, but could be as high as US$ 7 billion annually. Enhanced coordination of donors' aid allocation decisions to ensure that no low income country ends up inadvertently as an aid orphan will be an important step in addressing 'the issue of countries with insufficient aid.' 2017-07-17T18:46:37Z 2017-07-17T18:46:37Z 2010-09 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/615621468331012215/Will-countries-with-insufficient-aid-please-stand-up http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27572 English en_US CFP Working Paper Series;No. 7 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic AID
AID AGENCIES
AID ALLOCATION
AID FLOWS
BILATERAL AID
BILATERAL DONORS
BLIND
COUNTRY ASSESSMENT
COUNTRY PERFORMANCE
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
DEVELOPMENT BANKS
DEVELOPMENT FINANCE
DEVELOPMENT FINANCING
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH
ECONOMIC GROWTH
EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EQUALITY
EXPORTS
FOOD AID
GAPS
HUMAN RIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL AID
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
LEARNING
OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE
PUBLIC POLICY
WORTH
spellingShingle AID
AID AGENCIES
AID ALLOCATION
AID FLOWS
BILATERAL AID
BILATERAL DONORS
BLIND
COUNTRY ASSESSMENT
COUNTRY PERFORMANCE
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
DEVELOPMENT BANKS
DEVELOPMENT FINANCE
DEVELOPMENT FINANCING
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH
ECONOMIC GROWTH
EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EQUALITY
EXPORTS
FOOD AID
GAPS
HUMAN RIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL AID
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
LEARNING
OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE
PUBLIC POLICY
WORTH
Utz, Robert
Will Countries that Receive Insufficient Aid Please Stand Up?
relation CFP Working Paper Series;No. 7
description The Accra Agenda for Action contains a commitment to increase aid effectiveness by 'addressing the issue of countries with insufficient aid.' This paper highlights the difficulties in identifying such countries unequivocally, given the limited theoretical and empirical knowledge on optimal aid allocations. Actual aid receipts by low income countries are compared to several benchmarks derived from different aid allocation models. These models differ primarily with regard to the weights assigned to country needs and performance. The analysis shows that different aid allocation models identify different sets of countries as receiving insufficient aid. The paper does not find a greater tendency for fragile states to receive insufficient aid compared to non-fragile states. However, there appears a greater tendency for bilateral aid to leave countries with insufficient aid compared to multi-lateral aid, which in fact in many cases partly compensates for under-funding from bilateral donors. The potential aggregate cost of increasing aid to countries with insufficient aid varies significantly depending on which aid allocation model is used, but could be as high as US$ 7 billion annually. Enhanced coordination of donors' aid allocation decisions to ensure that no low income country ends up inadvertently as an aid orphan will be an important step in addressing 'the issue of countries with insufficient aid.'
format Working Paper
author Utz, Robert
author_facet Utz, Robert
author_sort Utz, Robert
title Will Countries that Receive Insufficient Aid Please Stand Up?
title_short Will Countries that Receive Insufficient Aid Please Stand Up?
title_full Will Countries that Receive Insufficient Aid Please Stand Up?
title_fullStr Will Countries that Receive Insufficient Aid Please Stand Up?
title_full_unstemmed Will Countries that Receive Insufficient Aid Please Stand Up?
title_sort will countries that receive insufficient aid please stand up?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/615621468331012215/Will-countries-with-insufficient-aid-please-stand-up
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27572
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