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Challenges for donors and partners

Challenges for donors and partners. Geske Dijkstra Erasmus University Rotterdam. Overview. The political context of the Partnership (GBS) Comparison results of programme aid evaluation 1999 with PGBS evaluation 2006 → Two problematic issues: Conditionality and ownership Selectivity

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Challenges for donors and partners

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  1. Challenges for donors and partners Geske Dijkstra Erasmus University Rotterdam

  2. Overview • The political context of the Partnership (GBS) • Comparison results of programme aid evaluation 1999 with PGBS evaluation 2006 → Two problematic issues: • Conditionality and ownership • Selectivity → Recommendations for donors and partner governments

  3. Politics in donor countries • Aid must be effective, Planning for results, MDGs → poverty reduction is a technical issue • Simple eligibility criteria: IMF agreement (= technical issue), sometimes nasty political or governance situation in recipient countries, threatening to interrupt the flow of aid money • Lip service to “policy coherence”: • Issues are beyond capacity of national aid agencies • Subsidies to private sector in donor countries while subsidies to private sector in recipient countries are not allowed • Aid budgets must be spent, “scaling up”

  4. Politics in recipient countries • Political patronage, clientelism → Interest in discretion, not in transparency and accountability • Poverty reduction is political issue, requires redistribution and taking political risks vis-a-vis powerful groups • (Perceived) Aid dependence → Lip service to poverty reduction, PRSPs, MDGs, good governance → Debate on domestic growth strategies dominated by foreign influence (IMF & WB) → No accountability to domestic constituencies: private sector, the poor

  5. Evaluation of programme aid (1999) • Funds: effective for stabilisation and growth • Conditionality: not effective, but there can be donor influence → Selectivity → Policy dialogue, not monologue • Policies: more reforms not always better → Caution with policy prescriptions • Systemic effects: Modality matters for influence → Budget support can focus attention to budget systems, but micromanagement should be avoided

  6. Evaluation of PGBS (2006) Money: • Stabilisation: unsolved tension with lack of predictability • Growth: More allocative and operational efficiency; more money to public services but outcomes uncertain Selectivity: political risks are underestimated, IMF judgment always followed, no fixed eligibility criteria for fiduciary risks and governance Conditionality and ownership: “If domestic support for policies, then PGBS can support it” → no overloading with conditions, limit disbursement conditions, agree with government and assess medium term results Policies: PRSP central; PGBS reflects biases in PRSP → more attention for growth and income poverty needed Institutional effects: positive effects on PFM systems → focus conditions on budget systems

  7. Conditionality and ownership: the broader context • Lessons from programme aid evaluation: take ownership seriously, for two reasons: imposing conditions on unwilling government is not effective, and conditions may be wrong • Practice: more conditionality than before: IMF, World Bank structural adjustment plus PRSP with participation; • For example, PRSP: • Willingness? “PR is higher priority for donors than for partner governments” • Is PRSP approach appropriate? • Poverty is not a technical issue; PRSP processdepoliticizes debate on PR • Long-term, comprehensive, results oriented: ignores domestic political processes • Assumes automatic implementation

  8. Selectivity • Agreement with IMF dominant precondition for debt relief and budget support • Problems: • IMF has not been selective in the past: creditor role mixed up with gatekeeper role • IMF involvement limits country ownership of PRSPs: no debate on macroecononomic framework and structural policies • Research: IMF involvement leads to lower growth • Too little attention for political risks, governance, corruption

  9. Average on six governance indicators (Kaufmann et al.) by number of IMF agreements during ‘94-’02

  10. Recommendations for donors • Provide policy space for debate • Consider limiting the role of the IMF in low-income countries, especially with regard to defining eligibility for BS • Be more selective with respect to politics and governance criteria, and assess political willingness to combat poverty (progressive taxes?) • Take ownership and domestic political processes seriously: assess home-grown plans and use plans that may be more limited in scope and time frame, rather than comprehensive, long-term PRSPs

  11. Recommendations for partner governments • Take policy space for debate on growth policies • Design policy measures for growth in cooperation with domestic private sector (including SMEs) … that may include financial sector policies, subsidies for exports … • Give attention to domestic revenue mobilisation including progressiveness of taxes

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