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FOREIGN AID

FOREIGN AID. EC 938 Professor Sharun Mukand. Foreign Aid. Why give foreign aid?. ENDING POVERTY?. Foreign Aid. Why give foreign aid? What factors affect Aid Effectiveness? Goals of Aid Organizations Recipient Incentives & Conditionality Donor Objectives

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FOREIGN AID

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  1. FOREIGN AID EC 938 Professor Sharun Mukand

  2. Foreign Aid Why give foreign aid?

  3. ENDING POVERTY?

  4. Foreign Aid • Why give foreign aid? • What factors affect Aid Effectiveness? • Goals of Aid Organizations • Recipient Incentives & Conditionality • Donor Objectives • Historical Evidence: Has Foreign Aid been Effective? • Burnside-Dollar(2000) • Alternative Viewpoints: How Aid Does Work • New Approaches to Making Aid Work • Private vs. Government Aid, Specific Aims vs. Broad Goals and Micro initiatives

  5. Why give Foreign Aid? Altruistic Reasons: • Natural Disasters/Relief • Economic Development • Encourage Political Reform • Build new institutions Self-Interested Reasons (may also have altruistic component) • State Failure  has negative externalities (e.g. terrorism due to state failure in Afghanistan) • Military/Strategic Reasons • Media Coverage and Political Pressure • ………

  6. How Much is a Seat on the UN Security Council Worth? By Ilyana Kuziemko and Eric Werker Journal of Political Economy

  7. Aid and Security CouncilMembership • There is a systematic relationship between UN Security Council (UNSC) membership and aid payments • Question is Why? • Possible Reasons for an increase in Aid Payments: • (1) Members of the UNSC trade votes for cash: • rotating members are able to extract rents during their time on the council. Thus rotating members could trade their votes for political or financial favors during the two years in which they enjoy a boost to their diplomatic importance.

  8. (2) membership on the Security Council simply enables a country to bring its needs to the attention of the world community….i.e. the economic needs of developing nations gain salience when they serve as rotating members. • (3) a correlation might be driven by an omitted variable: e.g. a country’s becoming more integrated in the world community might increase both its probability of serving on the Security Council and its annual aid receipts.

  9. How the UNSC Works • The UNSC is made up of 15 total members, five of which are permanent and hold veto • Permanent (P5) • China, France, Great Britian, Russia and the US • Non-Permanent (Typical Makeup) • Five from Africa and Asia • One for Eastern Europe • Two from Latin America and the Caribbean • Two from West Europe, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand

  10. Method of Electing Non-Permanent Members • All of the ten non-permanent UNSC members must receive the nomination of a regional caucus and must then receive a 2/3 majority vote from the UN General Assembly • This means that only countries that can get the 2/3 vote (usually the most influential nations) are nominated • They are elected for two year terms, five at a time, and are not allowed to serve two consecutive terms

  11. Data Collection • Limit of Analysis to developing nations that are non-P5 members • ¾ of these nations received economic aid • ½ received military aid • Political Controls • Countries with a war of at least 1,000 battle deaths (International Peace Research Institute) • Whether or not the countries were dictatorships or free (Marshall and Jaggers 2002) (FIX)

  12. Basic Empirical Strategy • Look within countries across time and measure how their aid changes as a function of UNSC status • Dependent Variables • Increase in aid (either US foreign or UN development aid) • Independent Variables • Whether it’s a member • Importance of Membership Year (NY Times) • Aid Patterns (Aid income before, during and after UNSC membership)

  13. i indexes countries r indexes regions t indexes years SCMember is a dummy variable coded as 1 if country i is serving on the Security Council in year t, X is a vector of time-varying political and economic controls for each country W is a regional quadratic time trend η is a vector of year fixed effects μ is a vector of country fixed effects

  14. The Timing Issue: T0 refers to the year that the nation served on the UNSC T-1 is the year before it’s elected T1 and T2 are the two years of service T3 and T4 are the two years directly following service

  15. Results • There is a positive correlation between membership on the UNSC and amount of aid received • US aid increases by 54% ($15m / year) • UN aid increases by 7% ($1m / year) • Important Years: When countries served during years that in which the UNSC received more attention • US aid increased 160% ($44m / year) • UN aid increased 42% ($6m / year) • Aid is greatest during T0, T1, and T2; it falls sharply back to T-1 levels during T3 and T4

  16. Extensions • Autocracy / Democracy Analysis • The more democratic a nation is, the less benefit it derives from serving on the council • Dictatorships, on average, experience a fivefold increase in aid • Reasons • Possible reasons for this phenomenon are the fact that dictatorships can vote further away from the interests of their countries without domestic repercussions from their populace • This makes them more susceptible to bribery

  17. Extensions 2 • Developing countries can expect a 66% increase in aid from UNICEF and the UNDP follows a similar pattern • Increases from other agencies were not significant enough to be noteworthy • Reasons • The US has the largest influence over UNICEF and a large but lesser influence over the UNDP

  18. There is a causal relationship between council membership and aid increases from both the UN and the US. • Dictatorships enjoy the greatest benefits from this relationship • Small countries • UNICEF and the UNDP are the driving forces providing the UN aid that makes this true

  19. Examples and Importance • During the first Gulf War, nations that supported the UNSC resolution on war with Iraq received increased amounts of aid while Yemen, the one country to object received lesser amounts of aid • The importance of these findings are that they contribute to two debates: • Whether or not aid is effective • Whether or not the UN should be reformed

  20. Discussion Questions • In light of this evidence, do you think the UNSC needs to be reformed? If so how? If not, why not? • Do you think there is a problem in general with countries receiving aid based on their membership? Why or why not? What implications does this have for the future? • How effective do you think foreign aid is? Does it leave poor countries more reliant on their rich neighbors? Does it undermine domestic development? Is it worth the good it does in light of this? • What errors or biases do you think this paper had? Do you agree with its assertion that the US “controls” the UNDP and UNICEF? Do you think other P5 members should have been examined for their practices? Why or why not?

  21. Mass Media and Foreign Aid • Does News Coverage Government Policy with regard to Foreign Aid? • Correlation between news coverage and foreign aid does not prove causation. Why? • More intense disaster will have  more news coverage • More intense natural disaster  foreign aid more likely (on humanitarian grounds…) • How do you make a causal case that news coverage encourage?

  22. Is the natural disaster less likely to receive aid because it gets crowded out by news coverage (e.g. Columbine School massacre or latest Britney Spears scandal) ? • Is foreign aid less likely if the natural disaster occurs during the Olympics (and hence gets crowded out of news cycle)?

  23. Is foreign aid less likely if the natural disaster occurs during the Olympics (and hence gets crowded out of news cycle)?

  24. Topic Outline • Historical Evidence: Has Foreign Aid been Effective? • Burnside-Dollar(2000) • Two Gap Model • What factors affect Aid Effectiveness? • Goals of Aid Organizations • Recipient Incentives & Conditionality • Donor Objectives • Alternative Viewpoints: How Aid Does Work • New Approaches to Making Aid Work • Private vs. Government Aid, Specific Aims vs. Broad Goals and Micro initiatives

  25. Optimists’ Case for Aid • Jeffrey Sachs: Poverty persists because: • Of Geographical factors: • Landlocked countries – trade less and dependent on domestic resources • Low agricultural productivity – rainfall dependent • Diseases – Many prevalent due to tropical climate • Too little Foreign Aid • Countries do not keep to their commitment of spending 0.7% of GDP • $400 billion on Military Spending annually vs. $5 billion on Africa

  26. Raw correlation b/n aid & growth

  27. Does Foreign Aid Increase Growth? • Most influential recent work – Burnside and Dollar(2000) American Economic Review • Finding: “We find that aid has a positive impact on growth in developing countries with good fiscal, monetary and trade policies but has little effect in the presence of poor policies” • Basic Specification: where g=per capita growth rate of country i at time t, y=per capita income, a=(aid receipts)/GDP, p=vector of policies and z=vector of other exogenous variables that may affect growth and aid • 56 countries, six four-year time periods between 1970-1993 • Basic Idea: If policies affect growth, and lump sum aid has a positive effect on growth, then policies should affect the effectiveness of aid for growth as well.

  28. Marginal effect of aid (1%GDP) on growth in varying policy environ.

  29. Impact of BD(2000) The Economist (March 2002) rebuked U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill for his scepticism about foreign aid, on the grounds that “there is now a strong body of evidence, led by the research of David Dollar, Craig Burnside and Paul Collier...that aid does boost growth when countries have reasonable economic policies” Canadian International Development Agency : World Bank researchers “..provide compelling evidence that good governance and a sound policy environment are the most important determinants of aid effectiveness” Millennium Challenge Corporation set up by U.S. Govt. in 2002 increased aid by $5 billion, based on country performance indicators. 3/16 indicators developed to award aid were based on BD(2000). IS THEIR RESULT ROBUST??

  30. Aid Flows

  31. Robustness of BD(2000) findings:1William Easterly (2003); Journal of Economic Perspectives • Larger Data set: • 1970-1997, rather than 1970-1993 • More data points even for original period 1970-1993 • Alternative Definitions of Variables • Aid: • Grants vs. Grants + ‘Concessional’ (low interest) loans (or Official Development Assistance, ODA) • Correlation between Grants and ODA = 0.933

  32. Robustness of BD(2000) findings:2 Source: Burnside and Dollar(2000) Source: Easterly, Levine & Roodman (2003) • Scatter plot of unexplained portion of economic growth against unexplained portion of interaction between aid and policy (i.e. Unexplained by other RHS variables in BD(2000))

  33. Alternative definitions of Foreign Aid…

  34. ‘Aid’ Definition Aid*Policy significant with ‘Grants’ definition of Aid & BD sample, but.. Not significant with ODA definition of Aid Neither so for low-income countries, where the results should matter more.

  35. BD Robustness – 3: Policy Variables Policy Variables: Budget surplus, Inflation rate, Openness to trade: • Openness: • Sachs-Warner index (0-1 index based on tariff barriers or socialist country or state monopoly of key exports or high black market premium) vs. • Black Market premium, Financial depth (M2/GDP ratio), Trade-GDP ratio • Use weighted averages of these variables, where weights depend upon how much of growth they explain in a regression without aid as an explanatory variable. • Growth: Real GDP growth per capita over • 4 years vs. • 8, 12 or 24 years

  36. Policy Definition Defining ‘Openness’ Index in terms of Black Market Premium % gap b/w ‘true’ value vs. official value of currency is evidence of barriers to free capital flows. Aid*policy does not significantly affect growth!

  37. Impact of BD(2000) The Economist (March 2002) rebuked U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill for his scepticism about foreign aid, on the grounds that “there is now a strong body of evidence, led by the research of David Dollar, Craig Burnside and Paul Collier...that aid does boost growth when countries have reasonable economic policies” Canadian International Development Agency : World Bank researchers “..provide compelling evidence that good governance and a sound policy environment are the most important determinants of aid effectiveness” Millennium Challenge Corporation set up by U.S. Govt. in 2002 increased aid by $5 billion, based on country performance indicators. 3/16 indicators developed to award aid were based on BD(2000). BUT THE EVIDENCE IS IN FACT, NOT VERY ROBUST (EASTERLY(2003))!

  38. Aid Agencies: Defining Goals • Measuring Outcomes A donor organization’s sense of mission, then, relates not necessarily to economic development but to the commitment of resources, the moving of money. . . . The estimates of total capital needs for development assistance in relation to supply seem to have been the implicit standard by which donor organizations have guided their behavior and judged their performance . . . the quantitative measure has gained its supremacy by default. Other definitions of success and failure of development assistance efforts have been hard to come by. ---- Judith Tendler(1975) • Peculiar Incentive problem of Aid Agencies: • Spending one group of people’s money on another group of people.. • ..where the beneficiaries have little voice on how the money is spent • Goals: “Development”, “Poverty Reduction” or “Growth”, but.. • Over the short run, many factors other than aid affect growth • How do you measure this goal concretely?

  39. Aid Agencies’ Goals -- 2 • If it is unrealistic to expect aid to affect growth over the short run, aid agencies have little incentive to set targets in terms of growth rates • and not surprising that they choose more observable measures – i.e. aid disbursements. • As recent as 2001, a World Bank publication ‘Ten things You Never Knew about the World Bank’ advertised ten accomplishments of the organization – all ten involved volumes of assistance for different purposes. • Question: How can scarce resources be directed away from less successful projects and towards those more likely to succeed? • Accounting for how Aid Money is spent • Imposing Conditions on Loans before they are granted (Conditionality): • Reward Good performance and Punish Poor performance • Reward self-motivated reformers more than countries on whom reform is imposed • Evaluating the effects of loans after they are completed.

  40. Accounting for Aid Money: The Fungibility Issue • “When a thing which is the subject of an obligation…must be delivered in specie, the thing is not fungible, i.e. that very thing, and not another thing of the same or another class in lieu of it must be delivered.” (OED) • If a donor gives aid for health, will it actually improve health in the recipient country? • If a donor gives aid for health, will it increase govt. spending on health at all? (Yes – but only in part) • …. NOT (necessarily) corruption! Govt. Could have • Emergencies, or even • Better idea of actual needs

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