Changing the Balance of Power Aid Management Tools Making Aid work: The Challenges for Aid Coordination and Management Aidan Cox, UNDP Regional Centre Bangkok.

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Transcript Changing the Balance of Power Aid Management Tools Making Aid work: The Challenges for Aid Coordination and Management Aidan Cox, UNDP Regional Centre Bangkok.

Changing the Balance of Power
Aid Management Tools
Making Aid work:
The Challenges for Aid Coordination and Management
Aidan Cox, UNDP Regional Centre Bangkok
Goal
• “Partner countries exercise effective
leadership over their development policies,
and strategies and coordinate
development actions”
– Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness
Slide 2
Time to Go Home?
• Lack of ownership
• Donor driven aid
• Lack of clear prioritisation
of aid
• Top down
• Unclear accountability
• Poor coordination
• Lack of predictability –
can’t plan effectively
• Direct funding by donors
parallel to Govt
• National know-how not
tapped
• Aid spread thinly across
sectors/locations
• High transactions costs
• Little alignment with
national systems
Nepal Presentation
Slide 3
Making Aid Work: Solutions?
• “The size of a country’s fiscal space is the
principal measure of ownership – anything
else is imbued with well-meaning
hypocrisy” – Rathin Roy, Manila
Slide 4
But:
• Past performance suggests major donors
will put only small share through Direct
Budget Support
• Even when donors do provide budget
support, it may come with a raft of
conditionalities – either explicit, or bundled
in with technical assistance
Slide 5
Can Aid Management Tools Help?
•Yes!
Slide 6
How?
• Philippines:
– “Government must know what it wants from
Donors, know its own priorities – otherwise
aid will reflect the priorities of the donors”
(Jeanne Illo)
See Gabriel Acasina Report on
Aid Management Systems
Slide 7
It’s our carpet, not yours
•
Be clear on the design – then it matters less what colour, quantity and
quality of silk donors are offering → You can weave them into your design
– If some donor offerings simply don’t fit – you can say so
– You can approach some donors to provide specific parts
– Your design provides your criteria for deciding what assistance to ask for and on
what terms you are prepared to accept it
•
If you don’t have a clear design, the pattern will be driven by what is
supplied – and it will end up looking all stripy and blotchy.
•
If so, then whole process has to go back a step – donors need to back off
and support the design process instead.
•
Choosing the right carpet design that is appropriate to the country’s needs
is key - and that you then have the skill, time, and capacity to implement it
•
Aid management then becomes not just about the supply of threads, where
they fit into the design, but also about the ability to build the loom, quality of
design, knots, etc.
Karin Christiansen,
Research Fellow, Overseas Development Institute, London
Slide 8
Turning the Pyramid upside down
• Ownership is the building block
– countries in the sub-region have developed
national visions, national development
strategies
The Rome Agenda
Ownership
Partner countries
Alignment
Donor- Partner
Harmonisation
Donor-Donor
Slide 9
Partners
Agenda
Aligning with
Partner’s
agenda
Establishing
common
arrangements
Using
Partners
systems
Simplifying
procedures
Sharing
information
Turning the Pyramid upside down
• Ownership is the building block
– countries in the sub-region have developed
national visions, national development
strategies
Slide 10
Too many suppliers of silk?
• Even if have strong national vision &
strategy, results will be poor if too much
time spent dealing with donors
– India: High transaction costs recognised, and
the under $25s asked to work through UN and
NGOs
– Cambodia: burden of 400 donor missions
Slide 11
Reducing Costs of Doing Business
• Request Donor
focus in 3
sectors only
– Focus improves
quality
– Focus means
scarce officials
deal with fewer
missions,
meetings
• Example of
Germany –
‘asked’ to shift
sectors
(Avoid marriage of
convenience)
Slide 12
It’s our carpet, not yours
• “He who has the gold, makes the rules”
– Doc Long, Chairperson of Appropriations
Committee
• Using Aid Management Tools to ensure
that all resources – whether through
Treasury or through UN/NGO/Private
sector work to support national strategy
• UN required to prepare Business Plans
Slide 13
Changing the balance of power?
Expertise
Expertise
$
Knowledge
Knowledge
Accountability
$
Partnership is not a meaningful term if one partner has
all the resources, much of the expertise, most of the information
… and takes the decisions
Slide 14
Knowledge can help shift the balance
• Director of Afghan Assistance
Coordination Authority recognised that a
world class aid tracking system and team
could:
– Help mobilise (and sustain) aid flows
• proof of transparency and accountability
• hold donors accountable for delivering on their
pledges
• ensure donors are funding the sectors which are
agreed
Slide 15
Going beyond aid coordination
– Promote integration of external resources within a
National Development Framework and Budget
• enhance credibility of national institutions and
domestic decision-making processes – all
assistance (‘off’ as well as ‘on’ budget) goes through
budget decision making process
• greater influence on allocative decisions previously
taken independently by donors/UN – revitalising cabinet
• ensure external and domestic resources considered
together – more rational overall allocation, greater
chance of investments being sustained/maintained
• DAD enables outputs to be monitored, blockages to be
identified
Slide 16
Credible national institutions & processes –
prerequisite for alignment
UNDP’s package of support
• Merit-based recruitment and training of national
team – Aid Coordination Unit → Budget &
External Relations Department
• Secondment of international adviser to
Government
• Partnership with private sector
– Contracted in aid tracking expertise – Synergy
International Systems, Donor Assistance Database
(DAD)
• Establishing Government website
Slide 17
5,000
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
0
2002
Slide 18
2003
2004
2005
2006
Slide 19
From Aid Tracking
to Budget Management
• In Afghanistan, adapted aid tracking system into
tool to prepare the Development Budget – and
tried to estimate future recurrent cost
implications of investments
– Public Investment Programme for each sector,
backed by data on ongoing and proposed investments
– Common financial summary and project document
format for every project (whether designed by
Government, donor, UN)
• Foundation for streamlined reporting of progress against
outputs
• Promotes Government participation: responsible Ministry for
every project. Sign off by Line Ministry and donor/UN;
submission to MoF
Slide 20
Better decision-making & resource allocation
Basic Aid Tracking
3. Progress against 1382 Budget
Commitments and disbursements made in 1382 will be used to
fund programmes over several years. A substantial financing
gap remains. The Judicial Reform Commission is leading the
collection of financial data, including projected and actual
expenditure for 1382, working in partnership with the Aid Coordination Unit. A critical
financing gap relates to corrections, where only one quarter of needs have been met.
1382 Financial Ov e rv ie w
Required:
24.87
Com m itted:
23.86
Disbursed:
17.77
3.3 Justice
• Simple
analysis of
commitments
against
budget
requirements
is misleading
20
Required1382
Committed
15
Disbursed
10
5
0
Corrections
Slide 21
Secretariat
Survey, Infra,
Training
Law Reform
Legal Ed &
Awareness
Structure of
Insitutions
Other
• Overstates
success in
year one, and
understates
available
resources for
year 2
Better decisions
based on better information
Transport Budget
Requirements, Commitments, and Funding Allocation ($m)
1200
1000
Requirements
Commitments
Funding Allocation
800
600
• Shows both
domestic and
external
resources
400
200
0
2003-4
Slide 22
• Guide to real
resource
availability
against annual
budget
requirements
2004-5
2005-6
2006-7
2007+
Slide 23
National Budget: Livelihood Programme
• Shows actual
projected
expenditure by
province
• Allows
Government to
promote
geographical
equity
Slide 24
Government-led Coordination
Mechanism
• National Development Forum
– Chaired By Government, prepared by
Government secretariat
• Governent-Donor Monthly Forum
– Macro and cross-sectoral issues – chaired by
Government, prepared by Governent
• Sectoral CGs – every two months
– Chaired by Line Ministry
Making Budget process work
Slide 25
Promoting Alignment
Partnership Forum Mechanism
Government Leadership
Avoiding Macro-Micro Paradox (ADB, Bruce Purdue
Slide 26
Slide 27
Slide 28
Afghan Aid Coordination Unit
(Became Development Budget & External Relations Unit)
• Transition from International TA to Afghan
Managers
• Recruited and trained 25 nationals
– Managers
– Donor Desk Officers
– Database team
– Website team
– Translators
– Administration
Slide 29
Aid Coordination Unit:
Officer Responsibilities – Donor and Sector
Slide 30
Slide 31
Slide 32
• End of Main Presentation
• Additional slides – background information
Slide 33
Slide 34
Overview of Donor Pledges
Slide 35
Overview by Sector
Slide 36
Demo
The default chart appears, in which the
amount by Donors is presented
Slide 37
Demo
To change the chart format to 3D, select
the option from the drop down list
Slide 38
Demo
To preview and print the current chart,
click on Print Preview.
Slide 39
Slide 40
Slide 41
Slide 42
Slide 43
Slide 44
Government
Website
• Information
sharing
• Transparency
&
Accountability
• Credibility
Slide 45