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Opinions of Friday, 18 November 2011

Columnist: Anzagra, Solomon

The Imperative of Paradigm Shift in Policy Reforms

Rethinking Aid Effectiveness: The Imperative of
Paradigm Shift in Policy Reforms

By SOLOMON ANZAGRA

Email Address: soloman72@gmail.com
KNUST-KUMASI

ABSTRACT

Up until the dawn of the 21
st
century the need for aid as policy response to low income countries
has become the centerpiece of most development debates simply because aid seems not to have
made any considerable impact in the lives of the poor and vulnerable group of recipient countries
and their attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Easterly 2007 opines that,
with over $500 billion dollars which flowed in to Africa within the past 42 years, the per capita
growth of the median Africa is almost zero. It is therefore crucial to rethink the distribution and
management of aid and as a matter of necessity restructure its channels and focus of
administration, for aid to be effective and ensure the achievement of its primary purposes of
development and poverty reduction.


Introduction

The issue of aid effectiveness has been of global concern and of contemporary prominence of
recent time. What is commonly lamented is the inability of developed communities to redeem
their pledge of the 0.7% Gross National Income to the Development Assistance Committee
(DAC) as development assistance agreed in 1970. But the deserving question is will this have
made any significant impact if it were honoured? The achievement of the Monterrey Consensus,
the Paris Declaration at the Paris High Level Forum II in 2005 and the European Code of
Conduct are for instance nod higher standards by the international community to bring the true
reflection of aid on the lives of the poor. With futuristic administrative benchmarks established
in almost every decade by the United Nations and the flow of foreign aid into developing
countries increasing almost every year, empirical literature reveals that it has no reflection on the
development of developing recipient countries and their attainment of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) (Boone 1996; Svensson 1999, 2000; Knack 2001; Brumn 2003;
Ovaska 2003; Easterly et al. 2004; Djankov et al. 2006a; Easterly 2006a; Powell and Ryan 2006;
Williamson 2008; in Williamson 2009).
However, the stark reality is that aid, when blended with the right policy frameworks, favorable
institutional environment, and positive governmental and administrative arrangements, can have
a positive impact on poverty reduction and the development of developing recipient countries
(Svensson 1999 and Burnside and Dollar 2000 in Williamson 2009). It is necessary to state that
the ideas in this piece though conceptual are supported by anecdotal evidence available in current
literature and concretized by several case studies and experiential empiricism.
Human Resource Development and the Future of Aid Effectiveness
Instead of giving cash aid to countries which normally get embezzled by leaders rendering it
inconsequential in the lives of the poor, aid should be made more in industrial capacity building
where capital assets are procured for recipient countries and the local people trained in that
regard to help them earn income to take charge of their own lives (Smith 2002). If aid is
therefore channeled mostly into developing the capacities of the youth especially, in the recipient
countries, there would be enormous benefits to the recipient countries as compared to aid which
is mostly in the form of cash transfers. When aid is in the form of skills development of the
youth, the human resource base of the recipient countries are enhanced. Developing countries for
instance, have always had difficulties in training some particular calibre of professionals due to
high cost of training such professionals. In some cases recipient countries lack the requisite
facilities to train competent professionals in certain fields. For instances most aid recipient
countries lack the competence to train professionals in the field of medicine and in the sciences
in general as well as other fields of study that are extremely important to the development of
developing countries. If aid is given in a manner that goes directly into the development of the
skills of the people especially the youth, recipient nations will stand to benefit more from this
form of aid than cash transfers which are at times misappropriated by self seeking leaders. This
will also ensure the sustainability of the impact of aid.


Aid should not worsen the recipient Country


Aid should be aimed at making the recipient country better rather than worsening it. Some aids
have been in the form of goods that tend to kill local initiative and innovation. Donors have
given aid to recipient countries that turn out to stifle local production. Food aid have contributed
to demoralizing local producers since these food aids bring the prices of locally produced food
down, thereby discouraging local producers to produce more. Such aids have done nothing but
have succeeded in making the recipients of the aid to be perpetually dependent on the donor
nations. Ironically, as these food aids succeed in making recipient countries dependent, the food
items are sold to the hitherto aided nations in subsequent times. As a result, hard earned foreign
exchange is used in importing food at exorbitant prices. This smacks of insincerity on the part of
the donor nations that have succeeded in collapsing the food production capacity of recipient
countries and clandestinely turns around to sell food to them when these countries needed their
assistance the most. These aids that deceive the recipient countries into a trap should not be
welcomed by developing country as they have long term negative ramifications for the recipient
country’s development.

Rethinking the subject of ‘Strings’ on Aid: the issue of Scientific Monitory and Evaluation
One predicament militating against aid effectiveness following its historicity up till date is the
accompanying conditionalities that are normally tied to aid by donor countries. Whilst giving
aid, donor countries normally demand that recipient countries spend a high percentage of it on
their companies’ products. America is known to have always required that about 75% of its aid
be spent on products from American companies with other donors having similar requirements
(Easterly 2006a). If it is not requirement that aid be spent on their market, donor countries
normally require that technical assistance come from their technicians, which leads to recipient
countries handing back aid to consultants in donor countries who may have very limited
understanding of the local problems at hand. Meanwhile donor countries have always argued that
the ‘Strings’ or conditionalities attached to these aids are in the best interest of the recipient
countries. And that it is to ensure that the aid really serves the purpose for which it was given.
However, this have always turn out not to be the case. Indeed if the sole purpose of giving
specific conditions to aid is really to ensure that the aid serves the purpose for which it was
given, then there could be mechanisms through which recipient nations could be given the
leeway to use the aid for their most pressing needs. And measures put in place to ensure that the
aid is actually used for the purpose for which the recipient nation really said was their priority
area. Anything apart from this could lead to the interpretation of Aid as merely initiated to rather
multiply the benefits to the donor nations but to the detriment of the recipient nations.
Available literature shows that aid ineffectiveness is partly due to the inadequacy of viable
monitory and evaluation mechanisms that will ensure true accountability. Aid agencies normally
under invest in enforcing conditions ensuring scientific evaluation machinery (Easterly 2003)
which normally leads to the mismanagement of aid or its diversion in to personal interests of
leaders of recipient countries. This calls for more enforcement mechanisms in monitoring the 4 | P a g e
management of aid in recipient countries to guarantee accountability and probity and not
necessarily conditionalities. This can be made possible by ensuring that recipient nations give
evidence-based quarterly reports of how effective the aid is being used. The reports should not be
taken as gospel truths but must be corroborated by allowing independent assessors to assess and
confirm the reports given earlier.


Aid should have pro-poor components


Aids can be made more effective if targeted specifically at the under-privileged and down
trodden in the recipient’s country. Even if the entire aid is not totally dedicated towards the poor
but a certain percentage should be earmarked to specifically cater for the needs of the poor and
the vulnerable in society in general. Aids with such components have the propensity to transform
the societies of recipient countries in a massive way. This is made on the backdrop that most aid
recipient countries have alarming poverty levels. So, any aid that targets such major societal
canker would have better impacts than generic aid that are at times left to the whims and caprices
of untrustworthy leaders. The aid that targets the poor and the vulnerable should not just be doled
out in cash to these underprivileged, but a scheme should be put in place that would provide jobs
and soft micro loans to poor and the vulnerable that will enable them to engage in productive
economic activity that generates them incomes. As this happens, the multiplier effect in the
economy will be tremendous. To ensure that the pro-poor policy of aid is fruitful, there should be
stringent measures put in place to ascertain whether the aid is really tailored towards the needs of
the underprivileged, evidence-base monitoring and evaluation should be done to ensure that the
targeted group really benefit. This will ensure poverty reduction in its true sense and hence the
achievement of the MDGs.

Aid effectiveness: Governance and the Role of Civil Society Organizations (CSOs)
Governmental bureaucracies and the ill administration of aid by public institutions have proven
to be some other reasons why aid does not always reach its targeted group and purpose. Most
times corruption and embezzlement takes better parts of aid. Preble and Tupy (2005) are of the
assertion that 80% of each donor money given to Africa are stolen and transferred into western
accounts by corrupt African leaders. There is therefore the need for the involvement of CSOs
both locally based and international, more directly in the form of collaboration with governments
of both donor and recipient countries to ensure the effectiveness of aid (primer on development
and aid effectiveness, 2007). The CSOs will play vital roles such as undertaking independent
researches, monitory and evaluation, consultancy services and other watchdog roles to help
ensure aid effectiveness.


Redefining the Institutional Arrangements for Aid Administration


The involvement of several multi-national agencies in the management of aid normally leads to
several principles secluding the management of aid which sometimes abates the spur to achieve
results (Easterly 2006c in Williams 2009). There is an instance where the World Bank, the IMF,
Inter-American Development Bank, USAID, US Drug Enforcement Administration, British
Department for International Development and several other agencies operating in Bolivia with
each affecting the outcome of aid but with no one agency ultimately responsible, (Williams
2009). This therefore calls for the redefinition of the institutional channels along which aid will
be distributed and managed and clear lines of operation of multi-national agencies on aid be
established so that agencies would be directly held responsible for the failure of a particular aid.
This will help whip up the zeal in agencies to achieve results and hence ensure the effectiveness
of aid.


Conclusion


The subject of aid effectiveness has become a complex matter and has therefore called for a more
locally-owned policy reforms than donor-driven agenda. Donor countries and agencies must
obtain necessary information about recipient countries to inform their decision of where, how
and how much aid should be given. Recipient countries must also obtain and deliver relevant
information about their own economy based on which aid will be given by donor countries. This
will ensure the effectiveness of aid in the sense that if relevant information is available, aid will
most likely meet its purpose. Issues such as human resource development and capacity building,
tied aid, scientific monitory and evaluation mechanisms and dumping in the name of aid are very
critical to enhancing the effectiveness of aid and ensuring poverty reduction and the attainment
of the MDGs by recipient countries. 6 | P a g e