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Donor Conditionality and Policy Reform

In: The Political Dimension of Economic Growth

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  • Tony Killick

    (Overseas Development Institute)

Abstract

My focus is on the use by aid donor agencies of conditionality to induce changes in economic policies and institutions. At the most general level, this throws light on whether it is feasible to use donor leverage to overcome weak institutions and anti-reformist governments — whether it is possible to use this as a device for prevailing over domestic political constraints on the adoption of better policies. If this appears to be asking too much, is it at least possible that donor leverage and money will tip the balance within governments between reformers and conservatives? Even failing that kind of decisive influence, conditionality may operate through a different channel: steering governments towards the acceptance of policy change in order to secure the ‘seal of approval’ of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and others, and by that means to add to the credibility of their own policies. Can donors act as ‘agencies of external restraint’, adopting the role that Robert Bates argues in Chapter 1 of this volume is being played in some developing countries by private international investors? Can donors’ policy stipulations impinge decisively on domestic policy-making by offering a ‘technology of pre-commitment’? Although donors behave as if their conditionality is highly efficacious, it appears that they have not been able to achieve such results.

Suggested Citation

  • Tony Killick, 1998. "Donor Conditionality and Policy Reform," International Economic Association Series, in: Silvio Borner & Martin Paldam (ed.), The Political Dimension of Economic Growth, chapter 15, pages 278-293, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:intecp:978-1-349-26284-7_15
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-26284-7_15
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    Cited by:

    1. Muhammad Haseeb & Kate Vyborny, 2016. "Imposing institutions: Evidence from cash transfer reform in Pakistan," CSAE Working Paper Series 2016-36, Centre for the Study of African Economies, University of Oxford.

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