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Title: Diapositiva 1


1
Was development assistance a mistake?
Turri Martina VR369283 Vespertini Giulia VR374016
2
What is development assistance?
It's financial aid given by governments and other
agencies to support the economic, environmental,
social and political development of developing
countries. It is distinguished from humanitarian
aid by focusing on alleviating poverty in the
long term, rather than a short term response. It
is the combination of money, advice, and
conditions from rich nations and international
financial institutions like the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund designed to achieve
economic development in poor nations. This is
broader than the usual definition of foreign
aid, including such categories as structural
adjustment loans, or even repeated stand-by loans
from the IMF to low income countries at
concessional rates.
3
The World Health Organization (WHO) uses the term
development cooperation to express the idea that
a partnership should exist between donor and
recipient, rather than the traditional situation
in which the relationship was dominated by the
wealth and specialized knowledge of one side.
4
How is it structured nowadays?
  • Aid may be
  • Bilateral, given from one country directly to
    another
  • Multilateral, from the donor country to an
    international organisation (World Bank or the
    United Nations Agencies) which then distributes
    it among the developing countries. The proportion
    is currently about 70 bilateral 30
    multilateral.
  • In more than fifty years 2.5 trillions have been
    spent in development assistance.

5
How is it structured nowadays?
Government sources (as official development
assistance ODA), provide for 80-85 of
developmental aid. Private organisations
("non-governmental organizations" NGOs,
foundations and other development charities),
provide for the remaining 15-20. In addition,
remittances received from migrants working or
living in diaspora form a significant amount of
international transfer. Some governments also
include military assistance in the notion
"foreign aid", although many NGOs tend to
disapprove of this.
6
How is it structured nowadays?
Government sources (as official development
assistance ODA), provide for 80-85 of
developmental aid. Private organisations
("non-governmental organizations" NGOs,
foundations and other development charities),
provide for the remaining 15-20. In addition,
remittances received from migrants working or
living in diaspora form a significant amount of
international transfer. Some governments also
include military assistance in the notion
"foreign aid", although many NGOs tend to
disapprove of this.
7
Was it a mistake?
  • It could have been a mistake for mainly three
    assumptions, on which the development assistance
    was based
  • We know what actions achieve economic
    development
  • 2. Our advice and our money will make those
    correct actions happen
  • 3. We know to which individuals we and our
    refer.

8
1. We know what actions achieve economic
development
Most of the economists have been convinced to
know how to achieve economic development. But the
ways to achieve development have been changing
over time.
9
1. We know what actions achieve economic
development
1950-70 development is compared to economic
growth
What was expected What really happened
This strategy focused on raising the rate of investment to GDP, including both public investments (roads, dams, irrigation canals, schools, electricity) and private investments. Public investments were much more as the states wanted to ensure that the countries would be provided with the right things. Unfortunately, the debts accumulated to finance these investments turned out not to be repayable, so there were two debt crises in the 1980s. The countries entered into a long process of rescheduling and writing off.
10
1. We know what actions achieve economic
development
1980-90, loans to finance structural adjustment
What was expected What really happened
Attention on how development should be done shifted away from mobilizing and guiding capital accumulation toward the success of the East Asian tigers, who combined export orientation and macroeconomic stability. This became the inspiration for structural adjustment packages of the IMF and World Bank and the Washington Consensus, which called for removing price distortions, opening to trade, and correcting macroeconomic imbalances (mainly budget deficits). The slogan of the new wave was adjustment with growth. Low income countries had little or no growth, the loans couldnt be repaid, and the low income debt crisis stretched out into the new millennium. Every year there was a new wave of debt forgiveness (e.g. the 100 percent cancellation of the structural adjustment loans and other official debts in the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative of 2006). Middle income countries of Latin America, had for the most part adjustment and debt repayment, but little growth compared to expectations in the 1990s. The hope that the East Asian miracle could be replicated elsewhere with the same policies proved illusory.
11
1. We know what actions achieve economic
development
2000-2010, The Second Generation reforms
What was expected What really is happening
Made by the Washington Consensus. They stressed the importance of property rights, contract enforcement, democratic accountability, and freedom from corruption. An alternative could be Sachs emphasis on making the right investments in things poor people need, which is really a throwback to the First Generation of planned investments. Rapidly growing countries like India, China, and Vietnam have already exposed the weaknesses of the new approach.
12
1. We know what actions achieve economic
development
Conclusions
We can say that each shift to a new approach to
the development was determined more by missing
elements, rather than wrong elements. All the
blame has been on the recipient rather than on
the development experts. A lot of these shifts
are provoked by broad stylized facts and
compelling country examples rather than by formal
empirics. In the new millennium, a remarkably
broad group of academics and policymakers seem to
agree that, after all that, maybe we dont know
how to achieve development. One of them is the
World Bank itselfdifferent policies can yield
the same result, and the same policy can yield
different results, depending on country
institutional contexts and underlying growth
strategies.
13
2. Our advice and money will make those correct
actions happen
The top quarter of aid recipients received 17 of
their GDP in aid over the past 42 years, yet also
had near-zero per capita growth. The cases of
Ghana, Uganda and Mozambique were cases of
recovery after steep collapse, and depend on
rapid growth episodes that usually prove to be
temporary. The cases of rapid growth currently
most celebrated -India, China and Vietnam-
receive little aid as percent of their GDP.
14
2. Our advice and money will make those correct
actions happen
The early expectations that aid would rise growth
failed to pay attention to elementary economics
a lump-sum transfer does not change the
incentives at the margin to invest in the
economy. P. Bauer (1976) any poor country
where incentives to invest are attractive doesnt
need aid, while a poor country without incentives
to invest will not have aid go into investment.
15
2. Our advice and money will make those correct
actions happen
Nor was there much better news on development
assistance changing the policies that were
supposed to raise growth. W.Easterly (2005)
structural adjustment lending also had no effect
on the kind of macro policies and price
distortions that it was supposed to
correct. P.Van de Walle (2001, 2005) African
countries did little reform in response to
structural adjustment packages or aid , and aid
may have even undermined policy reform.
16
2. Our advice and money will make those correct
actions happen
So, there was a general worldwide trend towards
better policies, but the degree of movement
across countries was not correlated with the
intensity of aid or structural adjustment lending
in those countries. And there was an
insufficient attention in aid agencies to the
political incentives facing recipient
governments large aid flows can result in a
reduction of governmental accountability because
governing elites no longer need to ensure the
support of their publics and the assent of their
legislatures when they do not need to raise
revenues from the local economy, as long as they
keep the donors happy and willing to provide
alternative sources of funding.
17
2. Our advice and money will make those correct
actions happen
Empirically, experts have found that aid worsens
democracy, bureaucratic quality, the rule of law
and corruption. Unlike most market transactions,
the recipient of the aid goods has no ability to
signal their dissatisfaction by discontinuing the
trade of money of goods. With little or no
feedback from the poor, there is little
information as to which aid programs are
working. Whit many aid agencies in each country,
with development of the country depending on many
other factors besides aid agencies, and with
inability to map actions to development, its
hard to hold an individual agency accountable for
a good or bad development outcome.
18
3. We know who we are
The problem is to indentify who are the subjects
taking responsability for world poverty. World
Bank or UN officials? National government
leaders? -The expert tradition is so strong that
the WBs response to the failure of expert
analysis on how to achieve development is to
intensify the use of expert analysis on how to do
that we have to be cognizant of country
specificities and need of more economic analysis
and rigor to policy making. -On the other hand,
economists should not find so hard to take the
idea of a spontaneous bottom-up order emerging
out of the decentralized actions of many actors.
Institutions may emerge much more from the social
norms and spontaneous arrangements of many actors
than from diktat of some expert from above.
19
Conclusions
-We dont know what actions achieve development,
our advice and aid doesnt make those actions
happen and we are not even sure who we are that
is supposed to achieve development. -It doesnt
necessarily follow tha foreign aid should be
eliminated. Foreign aid could finance piecemeal
steps aimed at particular tasks for which there
is a huge demand (more clean water, build roads,
provide scholarships). -The experts should
focuse their analysis on problems such as
inflation stabilization, financial regulation, or
red tape facing business.
20
Bibliografy
  • Bauer P.T. 1976. Dissent on Development Studies
    and Debates in Development Economics. Cambridge,
    MA Harvard University Press.
  • Boone, Peter, 1996. "Politics and the
    effectiveness of foreign aid," European Economic
    Review, vol. 40(2), pages 289-329, February.
  • Dixit, Avinash K. "Evaluating Recipes for
    Development Success." Paper presented at the
    World Bank DEC Lectures conference, April 21,
    2005. This version June 2005.
  • Djankov, Simeon, García Montalvo, José and
    Reynal-Querol, Marta, "The Curse of Aid" (March
    2006). Available at SSRN http//ssrn.com/abstract
    893558
  • Easterly, William. "What did structural
    adjustment adjust? The association of policies
    and growth with repeated IMF and World Bank
    adjustment loans" Journal of Development
    Economics 76 (2005), 1-22.
  • Knack. S. and A. Rahman. 2004. "Donor
    Fragmentation and Bureaucratic
  • McKinsey Global Institute, The Productivity
    Imperative Wealth and Poverty in the Global
    Economy, Edited by Diana Farrell, Harvard
    Business School Press, Cambridge MA, 2006
  • Rodrik, Dani. GOODBYE WASHINGTON CONSENSUS, HELLO
    WASHINGTON CONFUSION? Harvard University, January
    2006
  • Sachs, Jeffrey D. The End of Poverty Economic
    Possibilities for Our Time. Penguin New York.
    2005.
  • Svensson, J. 2003. "Why Conditional Aid Doesnt
    Work and What Can Be Done About It?, Journal of
    Development Economics, 70 (2), 381-402.
  • van de Walle, Nicolas. 2005. Overcoming
    Stagnation in Aid-Dependent Countries.
    Washington, DC Center for Global Development.
  • World Bank, 2005, Economic Growth in the 1990s
    Learning from a Decade of Reform,Washington DC
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