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The OECD Development Centre

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Title: The OECD Development Centre


1
The OECD Development Centre
41 Years at the Service of Development and OECD
to bring together the knowledge and
experience available in participating countries
to adapt it to the actual needs of countries or
regions in the process of economic development
and to place the results at the disposal of the
countries concerned.
2
  • The Development Centre was created as the result
    of a US initiative made at a meeting of the
    Development Advisory Group (DAG) in Tokyo in
    February 1961, a year after the creation of the
    DAC. Its mission - to synthesize knowledge and
    experience, to adapt it to developing countries
    needs and to put it at the disposal of those
    concerned - is still relevant today.

3
DAC and DEV OECD(60)13 and C(62)144 (Final)
A Partnership for Progress
DAC Where major bilateral donors work together to
increase the effectiveness of their common
efforts to support sustainable development
Development Centre Provides analytical support
for development policy making
4
  • The Centre and DAC/DCD have co-operated from the
    outset in many joint undertakings.
  • Each Unit recognises the complementarity of the
    other in the shared aim of bringing social and
    economic development to the poorer countries and
    helping to bring about their full participation
    in the global economy.

5
The Centres Methods
1 - Forward-looking Policy Analysis
2 - Study of Long-Term Global Processes
3 - Capacity Building in Developing Countries
4 - Substantive Policy Dialogue
6
  • The tools at our disposal, especially the
    experience and knowledge available in the OECD,
    have equipped the Centre to approach development
    questions through four ways.
  • The Centre has been and remains able to undertake
    forward-looking policy analysis.
  • Lessons of the past are applied to the challenges
    of the future in an effort to understand
    long-term global processes better.
  • Knowledge and experience, however, are not
    solutions in themselves without the capacity to
    use them effectively. Hence the need to work with
    developing countries in sharing reform and policy
    experiences.
  • Finally, our work programme is not desk-based
    research. It is more demand than supply driven.
    It is the outcome of a substantive dialogue with
    our partners in both OECD and developing
    countries.

7
A History of Responding to Changing Policy Needs
  • 1962 -1972 Putting Development on the Agenda
  • 1973 -1982 Bridging North South
  • 1983 -1992 Addressing Interdependence
    Divergence
  • 1993 -2002 Promoting Reform in a Global Economy

8
  • In each period of its history, the Centre has
    been called upon to respond to changing
    international circumstances and priorities. As
    needs have evolved, so has the Centres own
    focus. Guided by OECDs priorities and equipped
    with the Organisations own policy experience,
    the Centre has adapted its work programme in
    order to meet the policy challenges encountered
    by developing countries. Across the decades,
    priorities have shifted from putting development
    on the agenda, to bridging North-South cleavages,
    to addressing interdependence and divergence and
    to promoting sustainable reforms in the global
    economy.

9
Highlights from the past
Forward looking policy analysis
  • Industry and Trade in Some Developing Countries,
    Little, Scitovsky Scott (1970)
  • Project Appraisal and Planning for Developing
    Countries, Little Mirrlees (1974)
  • The Tying of Aid, Jepma (1991)
  • Adjustment and Equity, Morrisson (1992)
  • Towards Capital Account Convertibility, Fischer
    Reisen (1992)
  • Trade Liberalisation What 's at Stake? Goldin
    van der Mensbrugghe (1992)
  • The World in 2020 (1997) The Linkages Study
    (1995)
  • The World Economy a Millennial Perspective,
    Maddison (2001)
  • African Economic Outlook (2002 - )

10
  • One of the first products to put the Development
    Centre on the map was the work by Little,
    Scitovsky and Scott 33 years ago. This innovative
    work, based on hard research in a number of
    countries, was among the first to call into
    question the idea of import-substitution-led
    growth. It remains a standard text to this day
  • .
  • In 1992, three bodies of Centre work received
    particular attention. Policy Brief N5,
    Agricultural Trade Liberalisation Whats at
    Stake, was a ground-breaking study of the
    implications of agricultural trade liberalisation
    in the context of the Uruguay Round. It led to
    substantial progress on the issue and was widely
    quoted in national parliaments and international
    negotiations. Adjustment and Equity, took a
    dispassionate look at the effect of adjustment
    policies in developing countries. Towards
    Capital-Account Convertibility, cautioned against
    the hasty opening up of capital markets in
    developing countries that have weak
    regulatorysystems. This was well in advance of
    the financial crises in the mid and late 1990s.
  • The World in 2020 and the Linkages studies were
    both undertaken for the OECD and have formed the
    basis for ongoing OECD reflection about
    relationships with the developing world.
  • The phenomenal studies produced by Angus Maddison
    require no introduction. Both are fundamental
    texts and OECD best sellers.
  • The African Economic Outlook, immediately
    established itself as an indispensable tool for
    monitoring and understanding African economies.
    It serves a number of different publics. It is a
    very useful instrument for statistical and
    economic policy capacity building in the
    framework of the NEPAD initiative.

11
Highlights from the past
Substantive Policy Dialogue
  • Paris (1990) Africa Leadership Forum
  • China, Colombia, Chile, India, Mexico (1990s)
    Explanation and Adaptation of the GREEN
    Environmental Model
  • South Africa (1993/94) Support for ANC Policy
    Design
  • Côte dIvoire (1994) Reducing African Debt
    Possible Application of a Brady Plan to Africa
  • India (1995) Economic Reform, Structural
    Adjustment and Competitiveness
  • China (1995) Military Industries Conversion
  • Brazil (1997) Fiscal Federalism
  • Washington (1999) Fighting Corruption in
    Developing Countries and Emerging Economies the
    role of the private sector
  • Paris (1989 2002) International Forums on
    Economic Perspectives with the Regional
    Development Banks

12
  • This is a list of some of the Development
    Centres contributions towards supporting
    capacity building and reform in developing
    countries. Some highlights
  • In advance of international conferences on
    climate change, the Centre devised a model for
    measuring the effect of industrial policies on
    the environment and, importantly, shared this
    knowledge with developing countries. The model
    known as GREEN was then put freely at their
    disposal.
  • We provided direct advice to the incoming ANC
    authorities in South Africa, helping them to
    devise policies that would help ensure stability
    and growth.
  • In India, the Centre helped to raise awareness
    policy advice to the government and
    private-sector actors on how best to deal with
    and profit from economic reform.
  • Our experts responded to invitations from China
    for help with their military conversion policies,
    thus contributing to a smooth transition from
    armaments to civilian production 3 million
    workers were involved.
  • The Development Centre organised the 1999 meeting
    in Washington DC on "Fighting CorruptionThe Role
    of the Private Sector" in co-operation with USAID
    and corporate partners (namely PricewaterhouseCoop
    ers, CIPE and the MacArthur Foundation).
    Transparency International was among 12 other
    "Partner Organisations" involved in this meeting.
  • Finally, the series of International Forums on
    International Economic Perspectives, which began
    in 1989, in partnership with the regional
    development banks, has provided an opportunity
    for policy makers, business people, journalists,
    academics and other specialists to meet and share
    their experience of regional economic challenges.

13
Today
Towards Inclusive Globalisation
  • OECDs Action Plan for a Shared Development
    Agenda PAC/COM/NEWS(2002)58
  • Institutional restructuring for development

Development Cluster
14
  • At the dawn of the 21st century, priorities and
    capabilities have changed. Achieving the
    Millennium Development Goals, promoting
    sustainable development and securing adequate and
    effective financing for development have become
    shared objectives. The Organisations new
    strategic priorities now place development issues
    high on its policy agenda. The promotion of
    inclusive globalisation has become one of its
    major targets. In order to pursue these
    priorities effectively, the OECD has undertaken a
    major restructuring of its development-related
    activities.
  • The creation of the Development Cluster forms
    part of this overall new approach. It is
    complemented by increased collaboration between
    the Cluster Units and other Directorates and aims
    at mainstreaming development concerns across OECD
    Committees.

15
Our Context
  • Proliferation of development research capacity in
    developing and OECD countries
  • OECD Directorates increasing work on developing
    countries
  • Enhanced OECD outreach to developing countries
    (CCNM)

16
  • Establishing the Centres new priorities required
    taking into account the following developments
  • Research capacity has increased in both developed
    and developing countries over recent years.
  • Across the House almost all Directorates have
    begun to work more intensively on development
    issues.
  • The Organisation has developed moreover a very
    active outreach programme to developing
    countries, coordinated by CCNM.
  • The Centre has had to reposition itself within
    the Organisation, and to identify its value-added
    to its stakeholders.

17
2003 A New Centre
Institutional Changes
  • From Advisory Board to Governing Board
  • From President to Director

18
  • The changes at the Centre have not been cosmetic.
    Now a unit in OECDs Development Cluster, it has
    been integrated fully into the OECD. It has been
    restructured to resemble more an OECD
    Directorate. It now has a Governing Board
    composed of Member country Ambassadors. Unlike
    other committees, however, non-OECD members can
    become full-members of the Governing Board.
    Thus, today 24 countries, including India and
    Chile, are Governing Board members.
  • Its integration has also meant that it is now
    managed by a Director, appointed by the
    Secretary-General, rather than a President
    elected by the Council. Thus restructuring has
    implied that the Centre now services more
    effectively the OECD in close collaboration with
    other units. It essentially functions as a
    Part I programme, even though it is included
    under Part II.

19
A New Thrust
  • Supporting the OECDs strategic priorities on
    development through substantive dialogue, policy
    analysis and synthesis, and capacity building in
    developing countries.
  • ?
  • Deepening developing countries
  • partnerships with the OECD

20
  • Institutional restructuring is being complemented
    by the ongoing reform to our work programme. The
    major thrust of our work and activities is to
    support and, we might venture to say, help shape
    the OECDs strategic priorities on development.
    We can do that through engaging in relevant and
    topical policy analysis, undertaking syntheses of
    research output to support other Committees
    facilitating work, substantive and informal
    dialogue on current, forward- looking, or
    divisive policy issues and working with experts
    and state and non state-actors in developing
    countries to share experiences and learn from
    each other.
  • In these ways we hope to contribute towards
    deepening developing countries partnerships with
    the OECD

21
2003-2004 Work Programme Adaptive Capacity and
Inclusive Development
1- Market Access, Capacity Building
Competitiveness
2-Finance and Governance for Development
3-Social Institutions and Partnerships
4-African Economic Outlook
22
  • The Centres current work programme seeks to
    advance this overriding objective. The topics
    chosen reflect the priorities of the development
    community, including donors and aid agencies, as
    well as the expressed needs of developing
    countries themselves. Moreover, the programme is
    an integral part of the OECDs own programme of
    work and is executed in close collaboration with
    other Directorates.

23
  • Increased market access and raising supply-side
    capacities in developing countries are major
    policy challenges today. For the poorer
    countries, capacity building is of particular
    importance. The Centres analysis intends to
    clarify policy options both for the poor
    countries themselves and for OECD members. We are
    working on these topics with DAC/DCD, ECH, DAF,
    and ECO.
  • Having established the MDGs, the international
    community now has to deal with financing their
    realisation. Clearly, old forms of financing
    will be inadequate. The Centres analysis looks
    at the options available in the international
    financial system that can be drawn upon.
  • Attracting investment and private finance for
    developing countries, remains an abiding problem.
    Equally, the contribution of those flows to
    development and poverty alleviation is a
    priority. The Development Centre aims to evaluate
    the influence of governance issues on both sides
    of the equation, leading to policy
    recommendations for OECD and developing countries
    on how to overcome the governance deficit and
    enhance the development impact of investment.
    This work is done with DCD, DAF and GOV.
  • The role of institutions is crucial in
    development. The Centres research looks at how
    much poverty reduction and improved participation
    can be expected from supporting the adaptation of
    existing institutions, often described as
    "traditional". Though we know that public/private
    dialogue is key to improving public policy
    making, the difficulty is how to make it work
    effectively in countries where public
    institutions are weak, the formal private sector
    underdeveloped and disorganised, and where many
    civil society organisations are captured by
    narrow private interests. Can we go beyond mere
    slogans when we talk about PPPs in the poorest
    countries? We are working with DAC/DCD, GOV, SAH,
    BIAC and TUAC on these topics.
  • The African Economic Outlook is one of the
    Centres and the OECDs most successful
    publications. The Centre and the African
    Development Bank launched the AEO project having
    recognised a serious gap in our knowledge of
    African economies, especially in a comparative
    sense. Supported by funding from the European
    Communities, the joint Development Centre/AfDB
    AEO team is about to produce its third annual
    report. The value of the AEO is many fold, but
    its contribution to the envisaged NEPAD peer
    review process as well as to capacity building
    among the teams in Africa should be underlined.

24
New Forms of Communication
  • Policy Studies
  • Policy Briefs
  • Policy Insights
  • Working papers
  • Relaunched Newsletter
  • Active Policy Analysis Networks
  • Workshops and Expert Seminars
  • Participation in Global and Regional Forums
  • Informal Seminar Series

25
  • New forms of communication are accompanying the
    changes in the Development Centres role within
    the Organisation and in its relationship with
    policy makers. To make our work more accessible
    to policy makers and keep a wider public informed
    of what we are doing, we are remodelling our
    publications and concentrating more intensively
    on policy messages in both the Studies and the
    Briefs.
  • A new series, called Policy Insights, will be
    of very short papers available for downloading.
    Their purpose is to distil the policy message of
    our work.
  • The Centres Newsletter has been revamped to give
    information about the life of the Centre, but
    to do so in a thematic way we believe will be
    more instructive for the readership.
  • Informal Seminars and major events involving
    high-level experts and political figures will
    continue. They are designed to harness knowledge
    and experience to feed into our research and
    analysis, and provide an arena for other parts of
    the Organisation to join in contemporary policy
    debates.
  • All these products, with the exception of
    Studies, are available on our internet site.
    The site is constantly undergoing improvement. It
    will eventually become the major vector for
    dissemination.

26
2003 Joint Events DCD/DAC/Development Centre
  • Aid Effectiveness and Selectivity Integrating
    Multiple Objectives Into Aid Allocations Experts'
    Seminar, Paris 10/03
  • Development Co-operation Partnership and the
    Governance of Aid Informal Seminar with the NGO
    network The Reality of Aid, Paris 27/05
  • Meeting of Informal Network of DAC Heads of
    Information
  • Ottawa, 5-6/06
  • Land, Conflict and Development What Role for
    Donors?
  • Experts' Seminar with USAID, Paris, 19-20/06
  • Trade Capacity Building and Private Sector
    Development in Asia Regional Workshop, Phnom
    Penh, 2-3/12

27
  • Over the past year, the Development Centre has
    worked closely with DCD on policy coherence, aid
    effectiveness and selectivity, land and conflict
    and most notably trade capacity building.
  • In fact, the OECD Policy Brief on Trade Capacity
    Building, prepared for the Cancún meeting, was
    jointly written by DCD and DEV similarly the
    success of the recently-concluded regional
    workshop in Phnom Penh is a mere example of the
    synergies that can be generated. An important
    area of collaboration is our joint work on and
    with non-governmental actors, such as the NGOs of
    the Reality of Aid Network.
  • Finally, the Centre and the DAC/DCD have also
    been collaborating on the issue of "Public
    Attitudes towards Development Co-operation in the
    DAC Member countries", steering jointly the
    annual meetings of the Informal DAC Network of
    Heads of Communication and Information (last one
    held in June 2003 in Ottawa).

28
Some Other Major 2003 Development Centre Events
  • Joachim Chissano, President of the Republic of
    Mozambique Private Investment, Partnership and
    Progress in Africa. Informal Seminar, Paris,
    04/04
  • Economic Development in Africa Outlook and
    Strategies. Conference with Istituto Affari
    Internazionali, Rome, 28/05
  • The Coherence and Impact of Rich Countries
    Policies on Developing Countries. Experts
    Seminar, Paris. Sponsored by the Governments of
    the Netherlands and Sweden, 24/06
  • Development and Trade Challenges and Priorities
    Participation of representatives from Brazil,
    Chile, China, India, Mexico and South Africa.
    Informal seminar, Paris, 24/11
  • Foreign Direct Investment in Developing Asia.
    Experts Seminar with the Asian Development Bank,
    Paris, 26-27/11

29
  • By no means are all major events organised by the
    Centre over the past year (2003) mentioned here.
  • In April, President Joaquim Chissano of
    Mozambique, a major influence in the NEPAD
    process, accepted the Centres invitation to come
    to the OECD. In front of an audience of several
    officials from Delegations of the Secretariat he
    discussed the role of partnerships in development
    and his talk illustrated the benefits his own
    country has been able to draw from such
    partnerships.
  • The Centre organised a round-table discussion
    last month immediately after the Cancun meeting.
    Presentations by leading experts and trade
    negotiators from Brazil, Chile, China, India,
    Mexico and South Africa contributed to our
    understanding of tradedevelopment interlinkages
    and the range of developing countries
    priorities. The presence at the round table of
    OECD Delegations and Directorates led to a frank
    and almost unique policy dialogue and showed the
    benefits that the Development Centre can bring to
    the OECD process.
  • Finally, the long tradition of joint meetings
    with the regional development banks was continued
    in November with an experts meeting on foreign
    direct investment in Asia in collaboration with
    the ADB. The role of FDI and of
    FDI-trade-migration linkages were discussed
    extensively in the context of Asian countries and
    their impact on poverty alleviation and regional
    development were re-assessed.

30
Looking ahead
The Objective
Coherence and effectiveness in policies for
development and poverty reduction
31
  • Looking ahead, in order to advance the
    post-Monterrey agenda and to promote development,
    we need to revisit the effectiveness and
    coherence of policies. Effectiveness implies the
    measurement of impacts. Coherence refers to the
    consistency across policy objectives and across
    instruments and between policy instruments and
    objectives. Trade, investment, development
    assistance and migration policies of OECD and
    developing countries interact with each other,
    producing different, and occasionally
    countervailing, impact effects. It is important
    therefore to understand both transmission
    mechanisms and interactions across policies and
    to measure their joint impact on poverty
    reduction and development.
  • We should think again on the role of modalities
    and partnerships in achieving favourable outcomes
    and reassess the role of domestic institutions,
    governance and policy in sustaining pro-poor
    growth.
  • Our challenge is to convince our stakeholders
    that a holistic approach to policy making is a
    prerequisite for a holistic approach to
    development.

32
Concerted Action
  • Cluster co-ordination
  • Close collaboration with DCD
  • Common priorities for development with other OECD
    Directorates and Committees
  • Active constituencies in the capitals
  • A reinforced relationship with DAC high-level
    representatives

And
33
  • Looking to the future, the Centre will be
    actively pursuing the goal of forging even closer
    links with all Cluster Units and especially with
    DCD and the DAC. We all worked together to
    produce a joint Cluster Strategy paper for
    consideration by the Council. In it we suggested
    development priorities for 2005-2006 for your
    consideration as well as the consideration of
    other OECD Committees.
  • Our list of co-operative activities is
    substantial it will grow in the coming months
    and years. Likewise, we are working to improve
    our participation and representation in other
    relevant OECD Committees, to mainstream
    development priorities in OECD policy
    deliberations and to promote this holistic
    approach to policy design for development.
  • None of this will be easy. Some of it will be
    impossible if the Centre cannot establish and
    maintain active constituencies in OECD capitals
    and a reinforced relationship with our
    shareholders in Foreign or Finance Ministries.
    The very nature of our work and the spread of our
    activities means that our major clients are not
    identical with our shareholders, so we need a
    filter to disseminate our work to interested
    parties and policy makers and to channel messages
    from capitals back to us. We need to tune our
    work to the concerns of OECD member countries,
    and to do that we need to know your major
    concerns regarding development policy. We need
    your advice as to how to relate better to policy
    makers in capitals. Would it make sense for our
    contact point in capitals to be drawn from this
    audience?
  • This is an answer only you can supply and we
    would be grateful if you would think about it.

34
a continuous substantive exchange with each of
you
35
  • These are our priorities. In the discussion that
    follows, I would be very grateful if you would
    reflect upon how you would like the OECD
    Development Centre to better support your own
    priorities and activities.
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