1 / 12

THE ROADMAP FOR A GRAND BARGAIN: Creating a Powerful Development Model for the U.S. Government

THE ROADMAP FOR A GRAND BARGAIN: Creating a Powerful Development Model for the U.S. Government. July 2010. No unified global process exists within USAID for determining:.

rafiki
Download Presentation

THE ROADMAP FOR A GRAND BARGAIN: Creating a Powerful Development Model for the U.S. Government

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE ROADMAP FOR A GRAND BARGAIN: Creating a Powerful Development Model for the U.S. Government July 2010

  2. No unified global process exists within USAID for determining: • How priorities should be established for allocating foreign aid among recipient countries (i.e., between Pakistan, Malawi, or Paraguay); • How priorities should be established for allocating foreign aid within a recipient country among categories of aid (health, democracy, education, etc.); • In what sequence foreign aid should be applied in a recipient country (credit availability before basic education, or the other way around), or • What total impact U.S. foreign aid is having on addressing global problems, like illiteracy in the developing world.

  3. Without a unified, explainable global strategy, USAID • Lacks a coherent vision of development’s role in U.S. foreign policy; • Lacks a quantitative basis for establishing global program funding requests or staffing requests; • Lacks a basis for a unified measurement and evaluation system, and • Lacks a clear, compelling external message for seeking public support for foreign assistance.

  4. Development Strategy: Essential Elements • Clarity of Mission • Measurable Impact • Systematic Focus on Development • Flexibility and Partnerships • Viable Nation-States and Societies

  5. Rebuilding: Haiti

  6. Developing: Bangladesh

  7. Transforming: El Salvador

  8. Sustaining: Poland

  9. The Outcomes-based Goal “The U.S. development strategy is to ensure that, by 2025, all “rebuilding” and “developing” nations achieve “transforming” status, and that 50% of those nations achieve “sustaining partner” status.

  10. Country level Donor level Sustaining (Poland) Progress toward stronger institutions, capacity, and ownership Building the Budget Administration Budget Request Approach to demand-driven, systematic, and measurable development progress Transforming (El Salvador) Developing (Bangladesh) Continuous dialogue, monitoring and evaluation that ensures country-level investments make progress toward MDGs Continuous dialogue, monitoring and evaluation that accommodates local priorities under metric framework Rebuilding (Haiti)

  11. The Strategy Process • A USAID-led consultation with Congress, other USG agencies, civil society, business and other donors/development partners on indicators to address priorities of PSD and QDDR • Completion of detailed development gap analysis graphs for each country in the developing world. • The explicit use of the worst scores on each national set of graphs as a basis for developing Country Assistance Strategies. • Use of the extent and depth of the development gaps at the national level as a basis for recommended country foreign aid allocation levels. • The determination whether the totality of the programs would make a significant impact on achieving the Millennium Development Goals and U.S. national security objectives.

  12. Local Conditions Drive Development The precise program emphasis, sequencing, and proposed program levels are determined at the country level in the Country Assistance Strategy. • Host country priorities, other donor funding, and targets of opportunity all shape the Country Assistance Strategy.

More Related