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FROM THE DESK OF THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
Civil
society and Aid Effectiveness at centre stage
Release Date: 7 November 2007
By Kumi Naidoo, CIVICUS Secretary-General
Dear e-CIVICUS Subscriber,
Next year will see an important effort to ensure coherence between different parts of society, including civil society, in development aid. There are several preparatory meetings taking place to prepare for this event. Anabel Cruz, who commenced her term as CIVICUS Board
Chairperson in May 2007, attended a recent meeting organised in the Netherlands
to explore some of the issues that will be addressed at the
In solidarity,
Kumi Naidoo.
Aid
must be more effective…and more accountable too
By Anabel Cruz, Director of Communication and Development Institute (ICD), Uruguay and Chair of the Board of CIVICUS
The international community is very preoccupied with the impact, accountability and effectiveness of aid. Towards the end of 2008, the Accra High Level Forum will take place and the United Nations plan to hold
their Second Global Conference on Financing for Development (FfD) in Doha. This
As a preparatory step for the Doha Conference, the United Nations General Assembly organised its third High-level Dialogue on Financing for Development on the overall theme The
Monterrey
Consensus: status of implementation and tasks ahead on 23-24 October 2007, at the UN Headquarters in New York. That very same week, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands
convened an Experts Meeting in
The participants at the meeting in
1. What
has happened to the recommendation that donor countries allocate at least 0.7% of their Gross National Income (GNI) to Official Development Assistance (ODA)? ODA flows reached a record US$ 106.5 billion in 2005, equivalent to 0.33% of the GNI
of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) member countries of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Projections based on aid commitments by DAC member countries indicate that the level of ODA by the year 2010 will be at US$
130 billion, representing 0.35% of the
2. What
progress has been made on the principles of the
Paris
Declaration? The Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, agreed in March 2005, establishes global commitments for donor and recipient countries to support more effective aid in the context of a significant scaling up of aid. However, one of the most
important principles of the Declaration, namely the “local country ownership” seems not to be advancing and needs to be reframed as “democratic ownership”, so democratic participation of citizens is ensured and accountability of governments and
donors is given priority. As the 2006 Survey on Monitoring the Paris Declaration recommended, development strategies need to be “determined by each country’s priorities, pace and sequencing of reform”. If we go through the Survey, ownership is the indicator that gets the
lowest ranking.
4. How
to monitor and evaluate the Paris Declaration and its impact and outcomes? Self-assessment of donors or World Bank data on certain indicators is not enough and the review of donor performance is apparently not happening. A more impartial assessment is seen to be needed. The monitoring and evaluation process cannot imply
the introduction of conditionalities. Measurements are needed to evaluate if aid reaches those that need it most and the processes, from allocation to evaluation, must be characterised by transparency and openness.
One consensus was clear among the participants in
Warmest regards,
Anabel Cruz
Chairperson, CIVICUS Board of Directors
To send you comments, suggestions or contributions of articles, e-mail editor@civicus.org.
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