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Aid Dependence Reconsidered

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Author Info
Azam, J.P.
Devarajan, S.
O'Connell, S.A.

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Abstract

If foreign aid undermines institutional development, aid recipients can exhibit the symptoms of 'dependence' - a short-run benefit from aid, but increasing need for aid that is damaging in the long run. We show that this high-aid/weak-institutions state can be an equilibrium outcome even when donors and recipients fully anticipate the effect of aid on institutional development. However, a low-aid/strong-institutions outcome is also possible, so that the model encompasses the diverse foreign-aid experiences of countries like the Republic of Korea and Tanzania. When the development community ignores the effect of aid on institutions, the outcome depends strongly on initial conditions. Where institutions are already weak, institutional capacity collapses and foreign aid eventually finances the entire public budget. Where they are initially stronger, the result can be close to the institutions-sensitive equilibrium. The results suggest that foreign aid strategies, even for countries with similar per capita incomes, should be differentiated according to their institutional capacity; and that a short-run reduction in aid may increase a country's chances of graduating from aid.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Centre for the Study of African Economies, University of Oxford in its series Working Papers Series with number 99-5.

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Length: 14 pages
Date of creation: 1999
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Handle: RePEc:fth:oxesaf:99-5

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Related research
Keywords: FOREIGN AID;

Find related papers by JEL classification:
F35 - International Economics - - International Finance - - - Foreign Aid

Cited by:
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  1. Bandeira, Pablo, 2009. "El desarrollo institucional en el contexto de la ineficacia de la ayuda: ¿qué podemos hacer?
    [Promoting institutional development in the context of actual aid ineffectiveness: what can we do?]
    ," MPRA Paper 13372, University Library of Munich, Germany. [Downloadable!]
  2. de Haan, Arjan & Everest-Phillips, Max, 2007. "Can New Aid Modalities Handle Politics?," Working Papers UNU-WIDER Research Paper , World Institute for Development Economic Research (UNU-WIDER). [Downloadable!]
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This page was last updated on 2009-12-16.


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