La fin de l'aide publique au développement: mort et renaissance d'une politique publique globale
Jean-Michel Severino and
Olivier Ray
Revue d’économie du développement, 2011, vol. 19, issue 1, 5-44
Abstract:
The world of international development assistance is undergoing three concomitant revolutions, which concur to the emergence of a truly global policy. First, it is living through a diversification of the goals it is asked to pursue: to its traditional objective of ushering convergence between less and more developed economies have progressively been adjoined those of financing access to essential services and protecting global public goods. Secondly, faced with this new array of challenges, the world of development aid has demonstrated an impressive capacity to increase the number and diversity of its players. Thirdly, the instruments used have themselves mushroomed, in the wake of innovations in mainstream financial markets. Yet surprisingly, this triple revolution in goals, actors and tools has not yet impacted the way we measure both the financial volumes dedicated to this emerging global policy nor the concrete impacts it aims to achieve. This paper argues for the need to move from the conventional measure of Official Development Assistance to the construction of clearer benchmarks for what ultimately matters: resources and results that concur to 21st century international development.
Keywords: official development assistance; financing global public policy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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