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AID CUT BACK

Poorer countries will receive less aid from rich countries which are tightening their development budget due to financial challenges at home.

By Jaya Ramachandran

PARIS – Development aid that some of the world’s poorest countries are direly in need of declined for the second successive year in 2012, according to a new report. The reason, says the 34-nation Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), is the continuing financial crisis and euro zone turmoil, which has led several governments to tighten their budgets.

This in turn has had a direct impact on development aid which fell by 4% in real terms in 2012, following a 2% fall in 2011. “There is also a noticeable shift in aid allocations away from the poorest countries and towards middle-income countries. However, on the basis of the DAC Survey on Donors’ Forward Spending Plans, a moderate recovery in aid levels is expected in 2013,” says the OECD.

DAC is the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee, which currently has 25 members countries that have pledged to implement forthwith the Recommendations adopted by the DAC since its inception and to commit to use DAC guidelines and reference documents in formulating national development co-operation policies.

They also provide the annual submission of required ODA statistics and, on request, summary information describing their aid efforts and policies to be included in the Development Co-operation Report. Members undertake to participate in meetings of the DAC and at least one of its subsidiary bodies. Finally, DAC members agree to submit to a regular Peer Review of their development co-operation, undertaken by the DAC and the OECD/DCD, and to serve as an examiner in reviewing other member programmes.

The declining trend in aid has also prompted OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría to state that he finds it “worrying that budgetary duress in our member countries” has led to a second successive fall in total aid. “But I take heart from the fact that, in spite of the crisis, nine countries still managed to increase their aid. As we approach the 2015 deadline for achieving the Millennium Development Goals, I hope that the trend in aid away from the poorest countries will be reversed. This is essential if aid is to play its part in helping achieve the Goals,” says Gurria.

According to the OECD, in 2012, members of the OECD DAC provided USD 125.6 billion in net official development assistance (ODA), representing 0.29% of their combined gross national income (GNI), a 4% drop in real terms compared to 2011. Since 2010, the year it reached its peak, ODA has fallen by 6 percent in real terms. Excluding 2007, which saw the end of exceptional debt relief operations, the fall in 2012 is the largest since 1997, avers the OECD “This is also the first time since 1996-97 that aid has fallen in two successive year,” it adds.

The report further points out that the financial crisis and euro zone turmoil led many governments to implement austerity measures and reduce their aid budgets. “However, despite the current fiscal pressures, some countries have maintained or increased their ODA budgets in order to reach the targets they have set,” notes the report with apparent satisfaction.

The new DAC Chair, Erik Solheim, has expressed the hope that the DAC would continue to encourage its members to live up to their commitments.  “I welcome the efforts of those nine DAC members that increased their aid in 2012, and urge others to increase their aid as soon as their budget circumstances allow”, said Solheim. “Maintaining aid levels is not impossible even in today’s fiscal climate. The UK’s 2013-14 budget increases its aid to 0.7% of national income, which gives hope that we can reverse the falling trend.”

Aid allocations

According to the report, the largest donors, by volume, were the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, France and Japan. Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden continued to exceed the United Nations’ ODA target of 0.7% of GNI. Net ODA rose in real terms in nine countries, with the largest increases recorded in Australia, Austria, Iceland (which joined the DAC in 2013), Korea and Luxembourg. By contrast net ODA fell in 15 countries, with the largest cuts recorded in Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal, the countries most affected by the euro zone crisis.

Data for 2012 show that although total net ODA fell, aid for core bilateral projects and programmes (i.e. excluding debt relief grants and humanitarian aid) rose by 2% in real terms; by contrast core contributions to multilateral institutions fell by 7.1 percent.

Bilateral aid to sub-Saharan Africa was USD 26.2 billion, representing a fall of 7.9% in real terms compared to 2011. Aid to the African continent fell by 9.9% to USD 28.9 billion, following exceptional support to some countries in North Africa after the ‘Arab Spring’ in 2011. Bilateral net ODA to the group of Least Developed Countries (LDCs) also fell by 12.8% in real terms to about USD 26 billion.

The G7 countries – Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada, USA and Japan – provided 70% of total net DAC ODA in 2012, and the DAC-EU countries 51 percent. The United States continued to be the largest donor by volume with net ODA flows amounting to USD 30.5 billion in 2012, representing a fall of 2.8% in real terms compared to 2011. Washington’s ODA as a share of GNI also fell from 0.20% in 2011 to 0.19 percent in 2012.

The fall was mainly due to a reduction in bilateral net debt relief from USD 1.1 billion in 2011 to USD 56.3 million in 2012. However, US contributions to international organisations reached a historic high of USD 4.9 billion (30% in real terms compared to 2011). In 2012, US bilateral aid to sub-Saharan Africa fell to USD 8.8 billion (4.5% in real terms compared to 2011); however, excluding debt relief it rose by 7.2 percent.

ODA from the fifteen EU countries that are DAC members was USD 63.7 billion in 2012, representing a fall of 7.4% compared to 2011.  As a share of their combined GNI, ODA fell from 0.44% in 2011 to 0.42% in 2012.

Rise and fall

ODA rose or fell in DAC EU countries as follows:

Austria (+6.1%):  due to debt relief operations with sub-Saharan Africa; Belgium (-13.0%): reflecting overall cuts in its aid budget; Denmark (-1.8%): reflecting a reduction in bilateral grants; Finland (-0.4%); France (-1.6%); Germany (-0.7%): due to reduced contributions to multilateral institutions; Greece (-17.0%): due to austerity measures; Ireland (-5.8%): due to fiscal constraints leading to cuts in its aid budget; Italy (-34.7%): due to lower levels of aid to refugees arriving from North Africa and reduced debt relief grants compared to 2011; however, the Italian government has made a firm commitment to increase ODA allocations in order to reach 0.15-0.16 percent of GNI in 2013; Luxembourg (+9.8%): reflecting an increase in bilateral grants; Netherlands (-6.6%): due to overall cuts in its aid budget; Portugal (-13.1%): due to the unprecedented financial constraints leading to cuts in its budget; Spain (-49.7%): due to the financial crisis; Sweden (-3.4%): due to reduced capital subscriptions to international organisations, although cash disbursements to these organisations increased; United Kingdom (-2.2%): reflecting firm budget allocations were put into place to ensure that the government spent an ODA volume of 0.56% of GNI in 2012 and 0.7% from 2013 onwards.

In 2012, total net ODA by the 27 EU member states was US$64.9 billion, representing 0.39% of their combined GNI. Net disbursements by EU Institutions to developing countries and multilateral organisations were US$17.6 billion, a rise of +8.0% compared to 2011, due essentially to an increase in loans.

Net ODA

Net ODA rose or fell in other DAC countries as follows:

Australia (+9.1%):  to meet its international commitments to scale up aid in order to reach 0.5 percent  ODA/GNI in 2016-17. Canada (+4.1%): due to an increase in debt relief and its continued commitment to major regional initiatives; Iceland (+5.7%): reflecting the overall scaling up of its aid programme; Japan (-2.1%): due to a fall in bilateral grants and reduced contributions to international organisations; Korea (+17.6%): due to the overall scaling up of its aid to achieve an ODA/GNI ratio of 0.25 percent by 2015; New Zealand (+3.0%) reflecting the overall scaling up of its aid to reach an ODA level of NZ$ 600 million; Norway (+0.4%); Switzerland (+4.5%): reflecting the overall scaling up of its aid to reach 0.5 percent  of GNI by 2015.

Other donor countries reported preliminary ODA figures as follows:

Czech Republic (-4.2%): due mainly to lower contributions to the EU; Estonia (-2.7%): due to lower contributions to the EU; Hungary (-7.5%): due to the lower disbursements to the EU and a decrease in bilateral aid; Israel (-10.1%): due to a reduction in bilateral ODA;     Poland (+12.4%): which increased its bilateral ODA; Slovak Republic (-3.5%); Slovenia (-2.4%); Turkey (+98.7%): reflecting help to a large number of refugees arriving from Syria and increased support to North African countries following the Arab Spring; United Arab Emirates (+30.6%): due to the overall scaling up of its bilateral aid.

In 2012, DAC countries’ gross ODA (i.e. without deducting loan repayments) was USD 138.0 billion, down by 5.2% in real terms compared to 2011. The largest donors on a gross basis were the United States, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom and France.

Outlook

The most recent DAC Survey on Donors’ Forward Spending Plans provides estimates of future aid for all DAC members and major non-DAC and multilateral donors up to 2016. It predicts gross receipts by developing countries of Country Programmable Aid (CAP).

Global CPA rose by 0.3% in real terms in 2012, with falls from DAC members outweighed by increases from non-DAC donors. CPA is projected to increase by 9% in real terms in 2013, mainly due to planned increases by Australia, Germany, Italy, Switzerland and United Kingdom, and in soft loans from multilateral agencies (for example, IDA, the World Bank’s soft lending window, and IFAD). Total CPA is then expected to remain stable over the years 2014 to 2016.

The Survey suggests a shift in aid towards middle-income countries in the Far East and South and Central Asia, primarily China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Uzbekistan and Vietnam, and it is most likely that aid to these countries will be in the form of soft loans.

By contrast, CPA is likely to stagnate to countries with the largest MDG gaps and poverty levels, including sub Saharan African countries such as Burundi, Chad, Madagascar, Malawi and Niger.

As part of its transparency efforts, the OECD will publish country level data on CPA as submitted by several donors. – Third World Network Features.

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The above article is reproduced from the IDN-InDepthNews, 4 April 2013.

When reproducing this feature, please credit Third World Network Features and (if applicable) the cooperating magazine or agency involved in the article, and give the byline. Please send us cuttings. And if reproduced on the internet, please send the web link where the article appears to twnet@po.jaring.my.

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