Transparency Of Chinese Aid...

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An analysis of the published information on Chinese external financial flows/ news article by Sven Grimm with Rachel Rank, Matthew McDonald and Elizabeth Schickerling, Centre for Chinese Studies at Stellenbosch University

   The Chinese government publishes less data about its overseas aid spending than western donors, but more than is commonly thought, according to a new report from the campaign group, Publish What You Fund and the Centre for Chinese Studies at Stellenbosch university.

Transparency of Chinese Aid, launched today with a debate at Chatham House in London, highlights the shortcomings of Chinese aid information disclosure. These include the tendency to report aggregate levels rather than country-specific data, the absence of a central monitoring agency, and the lack of impact assessments.

However, the authors conclude that, contrary to general perception, provision of information is evolving fast in China and there is a willingness among the authorities to work with international partners on aid transparency, in particular looking at the technical details involved.

“Aid transparency is essential to enhance overall aid effectiveness and this year is key with the High Level Forum in Korea providing an opportunity to review donors’ progress,” said Karin Christiansen, Director of Publish What You Fund. “As emerging donors like China start to play a more central role in aid provision, it’s important to engage them in a dialogue about transparency and encourage them to increase the information available.”

The report’s purpose is not to provide estimates of the overall aid volumes given by China (which are not systematically reported) but it reproduces figures from a recent Chinese government white paper, China’s Foreign Aid, showing that 45% of all Chinese aid in 2009 went to Africa, 32% to Asia, and 13% to Latin America and the Caribbean. Of this, two fifths was spent on projects conceptualised, planned, financed and delivered by Chinese actors.

The Chinese definition of foreign assistance and aid are different from that used by Western countries, which makes comparison difficult.  The Chinese count military spending as aid, but unlike traditional donors, do not include debt relief or the cost of educating foreign students.

According to the recent Chinese government white paper, 11% of their aid goes to upper-middle income or high-income countries and around a third is given to countries with the same or higher income per capita than China.  One of the reasons why more country-specific aid information is not published could be to avoid the tricky questions about why China is giving aid to middle-income countries when it still has high levels of domestic poverty.

Others possible reasons for the non-publication of data include defensiveness towards the still-more substantial Western aid donors; irritation with the international community demanding adherence to their standards; desire to avoid competition between recipient countries; and lack of capacity to deal with the statistics.  An additional challenge is the number of different ministries and state agencies involved in disbursement of aid.

“Finding information on Chinese aid is like putting together a jigsaw puzzle. This is of course the case with other donors but the missing pieces are larger and less comparable in China,” said Sven Grimm, Director of the Centre for Chinese Studies at Stellenbosch University, and the paper’s main author. “What this report shows is a mixed picture: some progress but still a long way to go before Chinese aid could be considered truly transparent.”

The report makes a number of recommendations for how China could make progress on aid transparency:

  • Initial steps: Assess, test and develop a publication schedule for aid information that Chinese agencies already hold in line with the emerging best practice standard set out in the International Aid Transparency Initiative.
  • More substantial steps: Publish existing information already held by these agencies, in line with best practice, and facilitate the dissemination and use of this information, particularly by recipient country governments in the first instance.
  • More ambitious steps: Build systems to collect data that is not currently held and invest in the accessibility and use of that information in China itself.

The report also notes the responsibility of aid recipients to articulate the demand for increased donor transparency, and provide compatible information about their own budgets.

Attempts by the international community to engage Chinese actors are likely to be best framed in terms of the existing conversations about “South-South Cooperation”, according to the paper’s authors, rather than via the concept of aid-transparency.


[Download: Transparency of Chinese Aid: An analysis of the published information on Chinese external financial flows]

Notes:

  • Publish What You Fund is the global campaign for aid transparency, advocating for a significant increase in the availability and accessibility of comprehensive, timely and comparable aid information, with the World Bank, U.S., and EU as our main targets – http://publishwhatyoufund.org/
  • The launch of the paper ‘The Transparency of Chinese Aid’ will take place at Chatham House on 14 September at 12:00 – 13.30pm (GMT). Please contact Claudia Elliot at Claudia.elliot@publishwhatyoufund.org or on 0207 9206401 if you wish to attend or for an advance copy of the report.
  • The Centre for Chinese Studies at Stellenbosch University, South Africa, is the leading African research institution for innovative & policy relevant analysis of the relations between China and Africa.

Global Spending On Humanitarian Aid. Global Humanitarian Assistance

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GHA Report 2011

Synopsis

The global capacity to meet humanitarian needs is being stretched. Millions of people in sub-Saharan Africa are living with conflict and its legacy; natural disasters such as the earthquake in Haiti and the floods in Pakistan have the power to disrupt and sometimes even paralyse economic and social infrastructure; recovery and reconstruction remain uneven following large-scale conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan; and political turmoil is escalating in parts of the Middle East and North Africa. In many instances the people already affected by crises face additional threats, their livelihoods made more insecure by the effects of climate change and the vagaries of the global economy.

The international humanitarian response to these needs reached US$16.7 billion in 2010. If this preliminary, partial estimate proves to be accurate when full final data is available, it will have been the largest annual humanitarian response on record – higher even than in 2005, the year of the Indian Ocean earthquake/tsunami and the South Asia (Kashmir) earthquake. However, while the contributions of governments outside of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Development Assistance Committee (DAC) and those of the private sector increased dramatically in 2010, it is not clear whether these actors will become regular donors in years when there are no major natural disasters.

The overall humanitarian expenditure of OECD DAC member governments – the major contributors to ongoing crises – is also estimated to have increased in 2010. But this is underpinned by substantial increases by just three donors: the United States (US$430 million), Japan (US$275 million) and Canada (US$129 million). While the overall international response to humanitarian crises shows an upward trend, many donors are coming under pressure to justify existing levels of aid spending. Eight OECD DAC members look set to reduce their levels of expenditure for the third consecutive year in 2010.

In a global context of rising demand, escalating costs and budgetary constraints, the need to target humanitarian financing effectively and equitably is ever more compelling. In 2010, the level of needs that were unmet in the UN’s consolidated appeals process (CAP) rose to 37% (US$4.2 billion), compared with an average of 30.2% in the five preceding years. Moreover, humanitarian funding seems to have been more unevenly distributed across crises in 2010, with complex emergencies in many cases receiving a lower proportion of their funding requirements.

The effective targeting of humanitarian financing must include the effective coordination of all resources to address vulnerability to crises – while it remains important for humanitarian aid to be independent, neutral and based on need alone, it does not exist in a vacuum. Does it make sense for humanitarian assistance, which in many cases is being spent year on year in the same places, to be looked at in isolation from other types of potential funding?

To read about our partners’ opinions on GHA Report 2011, see blogs from John Mitchell (Director of ALNAP), Philip Tamminga (Head of the Humanitarian Response Index at DARA) and Tim Large (Editor-in-Chief at AlertNet, Thomson Reuters Foundation).

Chapter-by-chapter data is available for download from the Datastore.

 

Contents

Foreword

Executive summary

Chapter 1: Humanitarian funding

Where does the funding come from?

  • International governments
  • National governments
  • Private contributions

Where does the funding go?

  • Regional patterns
  • Country variations
  • Shifting trends
  • Current drivers
  • Same recipients, same donors?

How does the funding get there?

  • Route and rationale
  • Multilateral organisations
  • Non-governmental organisations
  • International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement
  • Donor funding choices beyond the OECD DAC
  • Financing mechanisms
  • Military
  • Meeting the challenge

Chapter 2: Forces shaping humanitarian assistance

  • Natural disasters, conflict and economic challenges
  • Humanitarian needs: funding appeals
  • Proportionality in donor responses to crises
  • Funding in accordance with assessed needs

Chapter 3: Beyond the divide: humanitarian assistance in context

  • Development aid in humanitarian crises
  • Tackling vulnerability
  • Domestic resources
  • Humanitarian aid remains important, in context

Data & Guides

  • Key definitions, concepts and methodology
  • Data sources
  • Acronyms and abbreviations
  • Reference tables

The Global Humanitarian Assistance team comprises researchers, analysts and policy advisors with practical field experience and backgrounds in development financing and reporting. Our work is organised in workstream areas: Global Trends; Governments; Delivery; Financing Mechanisms; Domestic Response; Conflict and the Military; and Scale of Needs.

African Economic Research Consortium (AERC). Collaborative Research China-Africa Project

China Africa Aid Trackbacks (0)

Policy Briefs, November 2010:

The Impact of China-Africa Aid Relations: The Case of Sudan
Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=647&category=


The Impact of China-Africa Investment Relations: The Case of Nigeria
Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=646&category=


The Impact of China-Africa Trade Relations:The Case of Mauritius
Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=645&category=


The Impact of China-Africa Investment Relations: The Case of Mauritius
Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=644&category=


The Impact of China-Africa Aid Relations: The Case of Angola
Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=639


The Impact of China-Africa Trade Relations: The Case of Cameroon

Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=642


The Impact of China-Africa Trade Relations: The Case of Kenya
Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=643


The Impact of China-Africa Aid Relations: The Case of Uganda

Available at: http://www.aercafrica.org/publications/item.asp?itemid=648

Climate Aid For The Poor: Www.Faststartfinance.Org

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A website launched on Friday will help track whether rich countries are keeping a pledge to come up with $30-billion in climate aid for the poor, seen by the United Nations (UN) as a "golden key" to progress in talks on global warming.

The UN-backed site (www.faststartfinance.org) so far lists cash promises by six European donors including Germany and Britain and 27 recipients from Bangladesh to the Marshall Islands. Many of the developing nations have blank entries on the amount of aid received.
Rich countries promised at a UN climate summit in Copenhagen in 2009 to provide poor nations with "new and additional" climate funds "approaching $30-billion" for 2010 to 2012. Until now, there has been no official site to track compliance.
Countries fill in their own entries on the website, without checks.

"I strongly called on other countries to join," Dutch Environment Minister Tineke Huizinga said of the Dutch-led initiative during a meeting of 46 nations in Geneva reviewing financing for the fight against climate change... [More] From Polity.org.za

Why this initiative?

www.faststartfinance.org aims to provide transparency about the amount, direction and use of fast start climate finance, in turn building trust in its delivery and impact.

Development of the website was initiated by the government of the Netherlands, with support from the governments of Costa Rica, Colombia, Denmark, Germany, Indonesia, the Marshall Islands, Mexico, Norway, the United Kingdom and Vietnam.

The website was launched by Ms. Tineke Huizinga, Minister of the Environment and Spatial Planning of the Netherlands, at the Geneva Dialogue on Climate Finance, on 2 September 2010...

21st Century Aid: Recognising Success And Tackling Failure

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21st Century Aid: Recognising success and tackling failure

Source: Oxfam GB
From Summary:

Aid plays a role in saving millions of lives, and yet despite its achievements poverty continues to cast a shadow over the lives of some 1.4 billion people worldwide. This has opened up questions over the effectiveness of aid and lately, unleashed a barrage of criticism, with critics using individual examples of failed aid to argue that all aid is bad and should be reduced or phased out altogether. This is both incorrect and irresponsible….

Key Recommendations:

  • Ensure aid is channelled to help support active citizens, build effective states as a pathway to reducing poverty and inequality, and support diverse forms of financing to contribute to development.
  • Deliver aid through a mix of models, including increasing budget support wherever possible, and ensure that a percentage of aid flows are channelled to civil society organisations, to enable people to better hold their governments to account.
  • Dramatically improve the predictability of aid, by increasing the proportion of aid that is general budget support where possible and by sector support where general budget support is not an option, and limit conditions attached to aid to mutually agreed poverty indicators.
  • Give at least 0.7 per cent of their national income in aid, and set out how this target will be reached, with legally binding timetables.
  • Reject a culture of corruption, uphold human rights standards, and act in ways which are transparent and open to scrutiny.
  • Provide legal environments in which civil society organisations monitoring government activities can flourish and respect the independence of non-government bodies like audit offices and the judiciary.

+ Direct link to Summary (PDF; 255 KB)
+ Direct link to Full Report (PDF; 1.7 MB)

 

Via Docuticker

AidData...A New Way To Explore Development Finance

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AidData is a new way to explore development finance. Our goal is to create a comprehensive and up-to-date data portal that is easy to navigate for users of all stripes.

AidData attempts to capture the universe of development finance, increase the value of data by providing more descriptive information about development activities, provide data in an accessible format, and strengthen efforts to improve donor and recipient strategic planning and coordination. The PLAID Project -- the predecessor to AidData -- benefits from significant support given by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Hewlett Foundation, Richard and Judy Finch, and the National Science Foundation. PLAID is a partnership of the College of William and Mary and Brigham Young University. Its successor, AidData, is a merger of PLAID and the Development Gateway's Accessible Information on Development Activities (AiDA) Additionally, our work would not be possible without the institutional support of the College of William and Mary, Brigham Young University, and the Development Gateway Foundation.

 

The AidData Vision

The AidData team is committed to building an easy-to-use, comprehensive, and timely resource describing the universe of development finance project-by-project, including all grants and loans committed by all major bilateral and multilateral aid donors. We currently have the most comprehensive database on development finance, but have plenty of additional work to do. Better data will help increase aid targeting and coordination, and it will enable better measurement and evaluation of aid effectiveness. AidData is currently developing a publicly-accessible interface that will enable researchers, field workers, and policy makers interested in development finance to access detailed project level data in order to increase transparency, accountability, and effectiveness.

AidData Project Information

The core of the AidData database currently encompasses multilateral and bilateral donor projects spanning the years 1945-2009. It contains information from traditional aid sources such as the OECD's Creditor Reporting System (CRS) as well as donors not captured by the CRS and activities that do not fit the OECD definition of Official Development Assistance (ODA). AidData augments existing data by publishing more complete project descriptions and more detailed aid project purpose codes. In particular, AidData is dedicated to collecting project-level data from all multilateral donors and non-DAC bilateral donors (NDBs) to provide a more complete picture of development finance flows and activities. This resource will allow donor organizations, citizens in donor countries, researchers, NGOs, recipient governments, and, ultimately, the beneficiaries on the ground in developing countries to gain a more detailed understanding of past and present trends in aid.

The Future of AidData

The AidData team at the College of William and Mary and Brigham Young University recently joined forces with Development Gateway to form what is now AidData, a development finance portal that combines the breadth and depth of the PLAID database with the timeliness and accessibility of the Accessible Information on Development Activities (AiDA) project. Over the next two years, AidData will expand to include previously unpublished data from both traditional and new donors. We also intend to classify and publish data on private aid flows as it becomes available. We will develop a variety of data visualization, networking, and mapping tools to allow a variety of different types of users to use this information in their work. AidData increases accessibility to this information for policymakers, NGOs, foundations, partner country officials, researchers, journalists and the public.

Who is AidData?

The AidData team includes scholars in economics, political science, sociology, and computer science, development practitioners, and NGO researchers based out of Development Gateway in Washington, DC, the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, VA, and Brigham Young University in Provo, UT. More information is available here.

 

Oxfam International: Video Library

Poverty Climate Change NGOs and NPOs Aid Human Rights Environment Food, food supply and food security Natural disasters Inequality Hunger and malnutrition Justice Trackbacks (0)

Oxfam International: Video

http://www.oxfam.org/en/video

Oxfam, the British aid organization that banded together with a dozen other organizations in 1995 to form Oxfam International, has a website loaded with resources, one of which is a video library. There are many issues covered, such as climate change, tsunami survivors, AIDS, and many videos include celebrities, including Colin Firth, Scarlett Johansson, Helen Mirren, and Annie Lennox. To increase their reach, many of the videos are also available on Youtube. To view the video in fullscreen, click on the screen icon next to the speaker icon. One of the more heart wrenching videos is the one titled "Our Home After Sidr-Documentary from Oxfam." It is the abridged version of a documentary, but conveys, nonetheless the dire situation of these Bangladesh survivors. Visitors should also not miss short animated video "Face the Music" about climate change, which uses only music and animation to show how climate change hits the poor "first and worst." [KMG] Scout Report

Tsunami Reconstruction, Three Years Later

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Tsunami Reconstruction, Three Years Later
Source: U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)

In the days immediately following the Dec. 26, 2004, earthquake and tsunami, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and other government agencies launched a $656 million reconstruction program. The money was provided by Congress in May 2005 and signed into law by President Bush for the Tsunami Relief and Reconstruction Fund (including $31.3 million to combat avian influenza).

When added to the money spent by the Department of Defense on emergency recovery assistance and relief aid, as well as food aid provided by USDA, the United States contributed $841 million. Moreover, swift action by the United States, in cooperation with other donors and private organizations, prevented another disaster by ensuring critical water and sanitation needs were met.

Americans also responded in great numbers. According to the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University, U.S. private tsunami donations, including both cash and in-kind donations, is more than $1.8 billion.

Press release with statistics.

Docuticker

Time Sensitive - Jeffrey Sachs On Aid

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JeffreysachsAs this year's BBC Reith lecturer Jeffrey Sachs will discuss an "overpopulated world on the brink of devastating change." This five-lecture series will only be available for 7 days after the first broadcast of each lecture.

His first talk "Bursting at the seams" calls for new solutions to extreme poverty and overpopulation. If you don't have a full hour to listen to the lecture, move to the question-and-answer part which features Geri Halliwell - a Spice Girl turned UN Goodwill Ambassador.

Those unconvinced by Mr. Sachs' worldview, will enjoy reading the rebuttal of his lecture by Dominic Lawson and Daniel Ben-Ami.

From

http://psdblog.worldbank.org/psdblog/2007/04/time_sensitive_.html

Post-Conflict Aid, Real Exchange Rate Adjustment, And Catch-Up Growth

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Post-conflict aid, real exchange rate adjustment, and catch-up growth
Source: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper (More)