Aid Effectiveness

The quality of development assistance is just as important as the quantity of resources provided.

The Challenge

For development assistance to achieve its full impact, it should be transparent, predictable and delivered in partnership with recipient countries. There have been some improvements in the way donors deliver and recipient countries process and manage development assistance in recent years, but progress needs to be accelerated. 

First, donor and recipient countries need to account to their parliaments and citizens for how external and domestic resources are used for development. This will allow donors and recipient countries to hold each other mutually accountable for improving aid quality.  Secondly, for better management of external and domestic resources, further improving recipient country systems to encourage their use by donors is important.  Strengthening these systems requires the efforts of both donors and recipient countries.  Finally, the transaction costs of providing development assistance must be reduced.  Managing aid is expensive for donors and recipient countries and will only get more expensive as aid volumes increase.  When donors utilize similar approaches for delivering development assistance and use country systems, transaction costs can be reduced and the impact of aid is increased.

The Opportunity

Development assistance has facilitated tremendous results over the past decade, proving that it can work, especially when donors and recipient countries each do their part to improve the quality of resources provided for development.  However, more must be done to stretch precious development assistance dollars even further.  In 2005, more than 150 countries, multilateral organizations, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) agreed to a common set of principles to guide the provision of development assistance to poor countries.  By signing the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness in 2005, signatories agreed to monitor their progress in improving the quality of aid provided against specific indicators, most of which have targets for 2010.  At the Gleneagles G8 Summit, the G8 committed to 'implement and be monitored on all commitments we made in the Paris Declaration on aid effectiveness, including enhancing efforts to untie aid; disbursing aid in a timely and predictable fashion, through partner country systems where possible'. In September 2008 these commitments were reiterated and reinforced at the High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness held in Accra, Ghana. 

Learn more, read the full Aid Effectiveness Issue Brief...

 

Related Hot Topics in Policy

  • 2009 G8 Summit

    June 16 2009

    The G8 countries only have a year before the Gleneagles commitments to the poorest are to be delivered, but some G8 countries, particularly the summit chair Italy, are falling dangerously behind.
    MORE

  • SMART Aid

    June 9 2009

    ONE advocates that all aid should become ‘SMART aid'. MORE

  • Dead Aid Is Dead Wrong

    March 27 2009

    Dead Aid by Dambisa Moyo is thin on the facts, big on the hyperbole and reckless in its call to cut off all aid to Africa. Dead Aid's recommendations would literally lead to the death of millions of Africans. MORE

  • U.S. Aid Reform

    Feb. 12 2009

    With a new Congress and a new Administration in place, there is an opportunity to prioritize development and modernize the U.S. structure for delivering assistance.
    MORE

  • Accra Forum on Aid Effectiveness

    Sept. 2 2008

    In September 2008, the Third High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Accra brought together ministers and officials, civil society organizations and development experts to discuss how to maximize the effectiveness of the $100 billion spent each year on development assistance.
    MORE

Act Now

Related Campaigns

  • Upgrade Aid

    Sept. 28 2009

    We can upgrade U.S. foreign aid through the bipartisan Foreign Assistance Revitalization and Accountability Act (S. 1524), which gives USAID the tools and people it needs to better fight hunger and poverty around the world. But this bill critically needs more support in order to make it through the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. MORE

  • Accra: Improve Aid Quality

    Aug. 1 2008

    August - September, 2008

    ONE members from around the world sent tens of thousands of letters and made hundreds of phone calls to development ministers in donor countries, calling for increased aid effectiveness. The ministers responded with a new level of commitment to providing more predictable and transparent aid. MORE

Media Center

Related Press Releases

  • Gates Foundation Launches “Living Proof” Campaign on ONE.org, Spotlighting African Success Stories

    Sept. 24 2009

    ONE today announced it would work closely with The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to launch the Living Proof Project: Investments in Global Health are Working, a multi-year awareness campaign by the Gates Foundation to highlight the extraordinary success of the United States and other G8 government's efforts to improve health around the world. MORE

  • Child Mortality Drops Worldwide Thanks to Scaled Up, Smart Investments in Global Health

    Sept. 10 2009

    Thanks to scaled up support for simple, relatively inexpensive solutions like anti-malaria mosquito nets, measles vaccinations and vitamin supplements, the number of children dying before their fifth birthdays each year has been cut to the lowest level ever on record, 8.8 million, according to a report released today by Unicef. MORE

  • MFAN: SFRC Bill Seeking to Strengthen USAID Adds to Aid Reform Momentum

    July 29 2009

    MFAN, a coalition of which ONE is  a part, commends Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-MA), Ranking Minority Member Dick Lugar (R-IN), and Senators Bob Menendez (D-NJ), Bob Corker (R-TN), Ben Cardin (D-MD), and Jim Risch (R-ID) for introducing the Foreign Assistance Revitalization and Accountability Act of 2009 (S.1524). The bill aims to start the process of foreign assistance reform, and we urge Members of both parties to support its final passage. MORE

  • ONE and Publish What You Fund Welcome Legislation to Improve Foreign Aid

    April 30 2009

    ONE and Publish What You Fund today welcomed legislation that directs the Obama administration to develop and implement a national strategy to modernize foreign assistance. MORE

Quick Facts

  • Untied aid is 30% more effective

    than tied aid, which is a development assistance package including goods or services that must be procured from a certain donor country or group of donors.

  • 150 countries signed

    on to the Paris Declaration, a set of principles to ensure development assistance achieves its maximum impact.

One Blog

From the ONE Blog

Sep 4 2009

3 comments

Jul 23 2009

On Modernizing Development

Posted by Leah Moriarty

4 comments

Jun 7 2009

Aid Debate Recap

Posted by Lisa.Fleisher

23 comments