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Simon Scott, OECD International Conference on MDG Statistics, Manila, October 2011

MDGs and Donor Behaviour. Simon Scott, OECD International Conference on MDG Statistics, Manila, October 2011 . What would we expect if MDGs had made a difference?. Overall increase in aid Shifts towards social sectors (especially health) Adoption of MDGs as targets

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Simon Scott, OECD International Conference on MDG Statistics, Manila, October 2011

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  1. MDGs and Donor Behaviour Simon Scott, OECD International Conference on MDG Statistics,Manila, October 2011

  2. What would we expect if MDGs had made a difference? • Overall increase in aid • Shifts towards social sectors(especially health) • Adoption of MDGs as targets • Demand for MDG-related indicators

  3. Note: Total ODA excludes exceptional debt relief to Iraq and Nigeria in 2005-06.

  4. Shift towards social sectors

  5. Adoption of MDGs as targets and demand for MDG indicators • UK, Netherlands and Denmark produce MDG reports (heyday early 2000s) • DAC tried a "sector approach" to measuringaid to MDGs (2002-3) • Slower growth of interest in USA, Japan, Australia  • Demand for indicators: IAEG, MDG reports, Global Monitoring Report etc.

  6. MDG 1: A special case • Halve the share of very poor people in developing countries • Not from a UN conference • More "growth focused" than other MDGs, though still social

  7. MDG 1 results • Will be achieved, unlike other MDGs • Mostly not thanks to aid • Food security element neglected until 2008 food security crisis and 2009 L'Aquila G8

  8. The “sectoral” MDGs - key donor responses • MDG2 - budget support to allow abolition ofschool fees • MDG3 - gender mainstreaming reversed - Danish torch campaign, Dutch MDG3 Fund • MDG4 - GAVI and rise of MNCH - Canada most recently in lead • MDG5 - Muffled reaction: MMR reduction target unrealistic; data controversies

  9. The “cross-cutting” MDGs • MDG6 - Health spending skewed to AIDS; use of vertical funds (GFATM, PEPFAR); progress on malaria hobbled by DDT controversy; tuberculosis only now taking off • MDG7 - Environment spending skewed to climate change, with niche funding of other issues - e.g. Switzerland on forestry, New Zealand on fisheries.  Water management still broadly supported.

  10. Conclusions • MDGs have been a major mobilising force for aid donors • Overall, MDGs a positive influence, though lobbying and special interests still present • Can't judge MDGs' impact only from 2000: UN conferences in 1990s set agenda

  11. Thank you For more informationwww.oecd.org/dac

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