William Easterly and Laura Freschi, writing for AidWatch, kick the aid anthill by claiming European aid agencies (particularly the UK’s DfID) are supporting autocratic governments instead of people by pumping money directly into national budgets, rather than development programs. A flurry of blog posts follow; we’re wading in.
Easterly and Freschi’s argument is essentially this: direct support to governments is intended to give more domestic control over how aid money is spent — a worthwhile goal. Unfortunately, the governments receiving said aid money are fundamentally unaccountable to their citizens. So much for local control.
Response 1
In the DfID camp, Owen Barder responds to Easterly et al. by arguing that:
A) The government of Ethiopia isn’t that bad.
B) DfID is giving money to local government, not the national government.
(These points were promptly shredded by a reader.)
Barder wraps up by saying the authors “need to do some proper analysis of the costs and benefits of different choices for aid delivery in different contexts, rather than simply asserting that it is wrong to give aid to and through governments of which they disapprove.”
Response 2
Our friends at Open Budget Partnerships (OBP) follow up with some actual evidence of whether the governments in question are indeed that bad.
Citing the Open Budget Index scores in Rwanda and Malawi, OBP argues that domestic accountability mechanisms are comprehensively lacking and must be enhanced if we expect foreign aid to effectively reach poor citizens.
So, which comes first: foreign budgetary aid to build institutions or the institutional mechanisms to support the aid?
In an unsigned blog post, OBP argues that money is not a cure-all:
While aid can be a useful carrot, the debate should focus on how to create domestic accountability, not on how and where to apply donor funding. In practice we know that domestic accountability institutions in poor countries are as weak as they ever were. Domestic accountability will not ‘emerge’ where budget support is provided. It must be built by the very same donors that adhere to the budget support approach.
That sounds right to us.
Our contribution: Ethiopia is indeed unaccountable.
In their 2008 index, OBP did not conduct fieldwork in Ethiopia. But we did.
The 2008 findings of the Global Integrity Report: Ethiopia solidly supports Easterly’s claims that domestic accountability is virtually non-existent in Ethiopia. This can be seen in the huge implementation gap between the legal framework and the actual implementation of anti-corruption reforms. Our researcher explains this saying: “rather than a question of regulations to promote accountability, the problem in Ethiopia is that the party and the state are virtually the same.”
In terms of the budget, our data suggests the Ethiopian legislature lacks the expertise to provide a detailed budgetary review and does not have the power to suggest changes that refute the wishes of the executive branch. In addition, substantial budget debate occurs behind closed doors. While citizens theoretically have access to itemized budgets, in actuality, access is limited. This reflects a broader trend of weak communication and information flow between government and citizens.
These realities in Ethiopia, Malawi and Rwanda prevent citizens from providing meaningful input in the allocation of aid money. As we have noted on this blog in a different context, transfer of large sums of money directly to governments with weak accountability mechanisms is unlikely to end well.
Aid donors can use their financial resources to leverage the political will needed to increase domestic budget accountability practices. Supporting these governance reforms must be a first step to any international aid program.
[Disclosure: There are some aid agencies among Global Integrity’s donors.]
— Norah Mallaney and Global Integrity
Very enlightening and beneficial to someone whose been out of the circuit for a long time.
– Kris
Thanks for sharing the link, but unfortunately it seems to be down… Does anybody have a mirror or another source? Please answer to my post if you do!
I would appreciate if a staff member here at commons.www.globalintegrity.org could post it.
Thanks,
James
Budget support enhancing accountability is not totally counter-intuitive. It implicitly requires that the agency providing budget support itself be transparent to the citizens of the supported country about what it is giving, why, and what they should expect their government to do with it, and ideally even inviting feedback.
If aid agencies spent a fraction of their budget acting as accountably and transparently as they urge governments to, they could harness the budget support channel to push for accountability. They just have to accept their own responsibility as the go-between of people and government in this instance, since the governments do not have such accountability themselves.
Not that I'm optimistic that they will choose to do so, as they are not ultimatley accountable to the citizens of the countries they aid – but the theoretic possibility is intriguing…
Thanks for this, Peter.
The notion, put forward by its proponents, that budget support will enhance accountability to citizens is clearly counter intuitive. And it’s good that the GI and Open Budget data highlight this. It is also counter intuitive to expect the same budget support donors to build accountability in some way, given experience.
Not that much isn’t tried – support to parliament, media and star NGOs comes to mind. But at best such instruments lead to incremental changes; at worst, they interfere in the politics of sovereign states. If we must have interventions of such a type they need to be built on understanding local dynamics and shorn of donors’ own interests. Both of which are unlikely given experience.
A first step would be to demand greater accountability from donors to both their domestic constituents and the reciipient societies they are trying to engineer. Something that is sorely lacking.
The Rwanda data from IPB is really staggering — it jumped out at me when I first saw the 2008 OBI. For those keeping score at home, Rwanda is one of the aid community’s current darlings (justifiably) for progress made in the past several years in terms of economic reform and growth. The OBI data is a serious call for reflection and putting that progress into perspective… in lay terms, at what cost, in terms of accountability, has that growth come?