Increasing aid and its effectiveness in West and Central Africa

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Briefing Paper Strengthening Social Protection for Children inequality reduction of poverty social protection February 29 reaching the MDGs strategy security social exclusion Social Policies social protection policies Children s Rights Increasing aid and its effectiveness in West and Central Africa Two related factors are currently dominating development cooperation with low income countries. The first is concern that aid needs to be scaled up significantly in order to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), while the second is a growing recognition of the importance of improving aid effectiveness. Both factors are especially relevant in West and Central Africa, since this region is furthest away from meeting the MDGs, has the weakest economies and arguably has the highest need for scaled-up, higher quality aid. This briefing paper presents, first, the trends in official development assistance (ODA) to West and Central Africa, focusing in particular on ODA to the social sectors, and then discusses the challenges of improving the quality of aid. Application of the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, adopted by developing countries and donors in 25, poses special challenges in a region with a large number of fragile states. Trends in ODA West and Central Africa has seen significant increases in aid in the past few years, but this has not benefited all countries. Much of the increase has come from debt relief, which has so far been concentrated on about half the countries. According to data from OECD-DAC (see Figure 1), the region received US$68 billion in ODA in 2-27. Whereas aid worth US$3.9 billion at 26 constant prices was provided in 2, this had risen to US$7.5 billion by 27, as Figure 1 shows. This was a 92% increase, higher than for Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole. As a share of gross national income, aid receipts increased from 7.% in 1997 to 7.9% in 27. Aid dependency is high across much of the region, with aid Box 1. The study on children, PRSPs and budgets in West and Central Africa This is one of eight briefing papers that present the main findings of a study on children, PRSPs and government budgets in West and Central Africa. The objective of the study was to deepen understanding of the impact on children of the PRSPs, the evolving fiscal environment and related reforms in public financial management systems and aid modalities in West and Central Africa. Commissioned by UNICEF s West and Central Africa Regional Office (WCARO) and carried out by Oxford Policy Management (OPM) between November 27 and February 29, the study included a regional review and five country case studies on Burkina Faso, Chad, Ghana, Mauritania and Sierra Leone.

in five countries (Cape Verde, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia and Sierra Leone) accounting for 1 2% of their gross national income. The surge in aid has been driven heavily by debt relief, which has particularly benefited West and Central Africa. Twenty out of 24 countries in the region are at various stages of the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) debt relief process. By 27, eleven countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, The Gambia, Ghana, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, São Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal and Sierra Leone) had reached the HIPC completion point the trigger for substantial debt relief. In addition, Congo, DRC and Nigeria have received debt relief outside the HIPC framework. Overall, debt relief accounted for about 54% of total ODA to West and Central Africa in 2-26, mainly concentrated towards the end of the period. Debt relief did not substitute for other aid, which also grew, though less so (by about 46%). However, regional aggregates hide very significant differences among countries. Six countries (Cameroon, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone) saw their total ODA, including debt relief, double from 2 to 27. But during the same period, six countries (Benin, Côte d Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau and Togo) saw a real decline in aid flows. Excluding debt relief, Mali, São Tomé and Príncipe and Sierra Leone also received less ODA. It is also striking that some of the poorest countries in the region have the lowest per capita aid flows. Overall, annual aid per capita increased from a low of US$24 in 21 to US$45 in 27. But some of the poorest countries in the region were among the aid orphans that received on average the lowest aid per capita: Togo (US$9), Chad (US$12), Nigeria (US$12), Niger (US$15), The Gambia (US$12) and the Central African Republic (US$15). A recent OECD-DAC survey showed that development partners plan to scale up further their programmable aid, both globally and to West and Central Africa (by 23% between 25 and 21) 1. However, despite the high priority being given to Africa, there is clearly a risk that actual aid flows will be less than expected, because of the acute fiscal pressures facing OECD countries as a result of the global recession. Figure 1. ODA flows to West and Central Africa (US$ million at 26 constant prices) 25, US$ million, 26 constant prices 22,5 2, 17,5 15, 12,5 1, 7,5 5, 2,5 Total of US$68 billion provided in ODA, of which US$36 billion in debt relief 3,884 3,948 5,614 1,365 6,522 12,282 17,613 7,469 On average, 54% ODA provided in debt relief 2 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 ODA, excluding debt relief Debt relief Source: OECD-DAC, International Development Statistics, 29 1 OECD-DAC (28), Scaling Up: Aid Fragmentation, Aid Allocation and Aid Predictability: Report of the 28 Survey of Aid Allocation Policies and Indicative Forward Spending Plans. 2 social reaching the MDGs

social exclusion reduction of poverty ODA to the social sectors Development partners have substantially increased the absolute level of their assistance to the social sectors. Between 22 and 27, a total of US$3. billion was disbursed to the health sector and US$4.4 billion to education (at 26 constant prices) in West and Central Africa. Aid disbursements for health nearly doubled and for education rose by 117%. Box 2. Health warning: Interpreting aid statistics Care should be taken in interpreting aid statistics. The Development Assistance Committee of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD-DAC) has two different data-bases that are not necessarily consistent with each other or to other databases such as those kept by the World Bank, the IMF and the African Development Bank. OECD-DAC statistics are collected through mechanisms for self-reporting by development partners, and therefore may not necessarily match aid data collected within aidreceiving countries. Given the importance attached to the new programme approaches to development cooperation in the Paris Declaration (and the need to monitor the Declaration s aid effectiveness indicators), it is surprising that the international aid data-base systems do not provide more and better information on the composition of aid by types of aid modalities, including budget support. As most of these statistics are collected directly from development partners, there is a strong role for them to play in improving the accuracy, classification and timeliness of data on aid flows in order to ensure that better information is provided, including for monitoring of the Paris Declaration principles. protection 3 Besides absolute increases in disbursements to the health and education sectors, it is also encouraging that both sectors increased their share of total ODA; from 6% to 1% of ODA for education and from 5% to 7% for health during the period. These figures may understate donor support to both sectors. An increase in balance of payments support, budget support and debt relief might well have contributed to external resources for education and health (through increased domestic budget allocations), but by definition it is not possible to trace this. Education disbursements more than doubled in fourteen countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Cape Verde, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Sierra Leone), but declined in the Central African Republic. Health disbursements doubled in twelve countries (Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, The Gambia, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Togo), but declined in CAR, São Tomé and Príncipe and Senegal. Aid effectiveness The effectiveness of aid depends both on the commitment and capacity of recipient governments to put aid to the best use and on donor practices. Institutional and policy weaknesses within aid-receiving countries, such as weak national leadership of the development agenda and innefective public administrations and public financial management systems, can lead to inefficiency in the use of aid resources and lack of sustainability in the results of aid. These risks are particularly high in so-called fragile states, including those enmeshed in conflicts or crises, or rebuilding after past conflicts. West and Central Africa has a particularly high proportion of such countries. Poor practices on the part of development partners also reduce aid effectiveness. Fragmented project assistance, parallel reporting requirements and a plethora of separate donor missions impose heavy transaction costs on scarce government capacity. Furthermore, unpredictable aid flows undermine governments efforts at medium and long term planning, while large flows of

off-budget aid compromise rational resource allocation and the role of parliaments in ensuring government accountability. The Paris Declaration attempted to address these problems by establishing a set of basic principles for development cooperation (see box 3). The application of these principles in practice depends not only on the good faith of development partners, but also to a large extent on the leadership exercised by developing country governments (the ownership principle) and the relative strength of country systems, although weaknesses in the latter are supposed to be overcome by capacity development. Two countries in the region, Ghana and Senegal, have set up mechanisms for mutual accountability reviews with their development partners. Ghana has drafted a comprehensive aid policy to implement the Paris Declaration (see Box 4). As noted above, the institutional weaknesses in fragile states, especially those affected by conflict, limit the practical applicability of the Paris Declaration principles, although not entirely -- the measures to reduce the transaction costs of aid (under the harmonization principle) are particularly pertinent in these countries. The Accra Agenda for Action, adopted at a follow-up High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in September 28, committed donors to implement the DAC Principles Figure 2. ODA per capita and ODA as % of GNI in West and Central Africa 6 Aid per capita has been increasing... 14...and so has aid as a proportion of national income ODA per capita (US$) 5 4 3 2 1 West and central African countries US$35 per capita on average Rest of Sub Saharan Africa US$27 per capita on average 12 1 8 6 4 2 West and central African countries ODA share 7.4% of GNI on average Rest of Sub Saharan Africa ODA share 6.4% of GNI on average 1997 1998 1999 2 21 22 23 24 1997 1998 1999 2 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 ODA as % of GNI 25 26 27 Wes t and C entral Africa Rest of SSA Wes t and C entral Africa Rest of SSA Sources: OECD-DAC, International Development Statistics, 29. Box 3. The Paris Declaration principles The Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness is based on the following five principles: of public financial management (PFM) capacity and improved predictability of aid commitments and aid-receiving countries, and improved provision of information on aid flows by donors. 4 sécurity Children s Rights

for Good Engagement in Fragile States and Situations. These principles include harmonization among donors (for example, joint assessments and pooled funding) and capacity development for core state functions and postconflict recovery. In preparation for the Accra High-Level Forum, the OECD-DAC carried out a survey of progress in the implementation of the Paris Declaration principles. This indicated that some progress was being made globally, but not fast enough to meet the 21 targets 2. Data were for 27, with 18 countries in West and Central Africa reporting. The percentage of aid using governments PFM systems (measured as an average for budget execution, reporting and auditing) varied from % in Côte d Ivoire, DRC and Nigeria to highs of 51% in Ghana and 53% in Cameroon. The use of national procurement systems ranged from % in Liberia and Nigeria to 63% in Benin and Cameroon (see Figure 3). Overall, 19.4% of ODA was in the form of budget support. But there were large variations, with budget support most advanced in countries with stronger public financial management systems. While budget support accounted for none of the aid to Chad, Gabon and Nigeria, and less than 1% of the aid to Côte d Ivoire, the proportions were over 2% in Cape Verde, Liberia and Mali, and over 3% in Benin, Burkina Faso and Ghana. Conclusions The region has received a large increase in aid in the past few years, but not all countries have benefited. Debt Box 4. Ghana s emerging aid policy In 28, the Government of Ghana presented a draft aid policy based on the Paris Declaration. This sets out basic principles for development cooperation, including country ownership, predictability of aid, mutual accountability, reduced conditionality, equity in resource allocation and a long-term goal of reducing aid dependency. Aid programming is to be guided by the Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy II and the nearly finalised National Development Plan 29-215. The central message is use of country systems. The policy aims to increase un-earmarked general budget support to 6% of aid by 21. To a limited extent, un-earmarked sector budget support, within a sector wide approach (SWAP), will also be encouraged, but project aid will be limited mainly to capital-intensive infrastructure. The government will decline all assistance that has high transaction costs, is poorly aligned to To strengthen predictability and ensure that ODA is fully factored into the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and annual budgeting, the policy urges development partners to make three-year aid commitments at least six months before the start of each budget year. For its part, the government will further strengthen transparency, reduce corruption and improve value for money in public expenditure. The draft aid policy also aims to improve the quality of technical assistance, which currently accounts for 25-3% of ODA and is largely supply driven, fragmented and unsustainable. A capacity development strategy will define the role of external technical assistance in enhancing capacity. Other measures include the rationalization of M&E frameworks to reduce parallel reporting, a strengthened role for the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning as the sole government body empowered to contract aid, and the streamlining of mechanisms for government-partner coordination under stronger government leadership. 2 OECD-DAC (28), Better Aid: 28 Survey on Monitoring the Paris Declaration. 5

relief has accounted for most of the increase, which has been concentrated on only half the countries. Some of the poorest countries in the region are aid orphans, with the lowest per capita aid flows. Besides absolute increases in disbursements to the health and education sectors, it is encouraging that both sectors increased their share of total ODA. Some progress has been made to improve the effectiveness of aid. But, as would be expected, implementation of the Paris Declaration principles has made the most progress in the more stable countries with stronger governance and PFM systems. Progress has been problematic in some of the more fragile states, particularly those affected by conflict or serious governance problems. Figure 3. Percentage of gross ODA using country PFM and procurement systems, and as budget support, 27 Use of PMF system Use of procurement system Budget support C ameroon 53 C ameroon 63 Benin 35,45918 Ghana 51 Benin 63 Ghana 34,45761 Benin 47 Ghana 56 Burkina Faso 32,52721 Burkina Faso 43 Burkina Faso 54 Liberia 27,77778 Mali 34 Senegal 41 Mali 26,1457 Liberia 32 Sierra Leone 38 Cape Verde 21,5263 Niger 26 Niger 37 Niger 19,85981 CAR 24 Mali 35 DR C 19,6279 Cape Verde 23 Gabon 32 Senegal 13,81295 Sierra Leone 2 Mauritania 22 Sierra Leone 13,14879 Senegal 19 Cape Verde 22 C ameroon 9,84556 Mauritania 8 Togo 15 CAR 6,97561 Gabon 5 Chad 11 Togo 3,529412 Togo 4 CAR 1 Mauritania 1,652893 Chad 1 Côte d'ivoire 9 Côte d'ivoire,526316 Nigeria DR C 1 Chad Côte d'ivoire Nigeria Gabon DR C Liberia Nigeria 2 4 6 8 2 4 6 8 1 2 3 4 5 Source: OECD-DAC (28), Better Aid: 28 Survey on Monitoring the Paris Declaration. UNICEF West and Central Africa Regional Office P.O. Box 2972 Yoff, Dakar, Senegal Oxford Policy Management (OPM) 6, St. Aldates Courtyard, St. Aldates, Oxford OX1 1BN, UK UNICEF, 29 The findings, interpretations and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the policies or the views of UNICEF and OPM. Layout & design: Photography: 6