The implications of foreign aid fungibility for development assistance
Shantayanan Devarajan and
Vinaya Swaroop
No 2022, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank
Abstract:
A foreign aid or foreign lending policy that focuses exclusively on project financing may have unintended consequences, report the authors. New research shows that aid intended for crucial social and economic sectors often merely substitutes for spending that recipient governments would have undertaken anyway and the funds that are thereby freed up are spent for other purposes. If the aid funds something that would have been done anyway, traditional ways of evaluating the aid's effectiveness are not really accurate. Ifaid funds are fungible and the recipient's public spending program is unsatisfactory, project lending may not be cost-effective. If the recipient's public spending program is satisfactory, perhaps the donor should finance a portion of it instead of financing individual projects. One solution to the problem of fungibility, then, is that donors could tie assistance to an overall public spending program (in the recipient country) that provides adequate resources to crucial sectors. To make this kind of reform operational, the authors propose a new lending instrument: a public expenditure reform loan (PERL). A PERL would tie an institution's lending strategy to the recipient country's achievement of mutually agreed-upon development goals. Everyone agrees that better donor coordination is needed, but it has been difficult to achieve because some donors tend to prefer projects (usually with the national flag flying over them). By agreeing on a public expenditure program and financing a portion of it, the World Bank credibly ask other donors to do the same.
Keywords: Payment Systems&Infrastructure; Development Economics&Aid Effectiveness; Gender and Development; Decentralization; Economic Adjustment and Lending; Development Economics&Aid Effectiveness; Poverty Assessment; National Governance; Economic Adjustment and Lending; Public Sector Economics&Finance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1998-12-31
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (25)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:2022
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